With the Hot in the Shade live
performance before it, and the Revenge release
in 1992, it looked like KISS had settled on a new and kick-ass image and sound
and Gene was focusing on the group again.
The looks came together staring on Crazy
Nights in 1987, but the sound wasn’t there yet. Paul was always the ringmaster on stage with
a powerful yet theatrical quality voice.
(I would have liked to see him in Phantom of the Opera.) However, the band lost a lot of its hardness and edge with
Gene’s influence lessened.
Before his untimely
passing Eric Carr had been in the band longer than Peter Criss, and Bruce
Kulick was their lead guitarist longer than Ace. All true lead guitarists have distinctive
“voices” when they play. (And all true
metal heads can usually identify them from a quick riff.) This meant even when they played their older
numbers in concert, they more closely matched the new KISS sound with Bruce
wailing away.
The band known for their
performances that arrived at the top with the release of Alive (1975) and celebrated their stay there with Alive II (1977) came out with Alive III
in 1993 as one of many ways that looked like they were embracing their new
focus, sound and membership. They were loud, dark and cool again.
Suddenly Bruce and Eric
Singer (Who replaced Carr for Revenge and
upped the hardness of the sound even more. I saw him play a solo with flaming sticks on
October 5, 2000 in the Paramount Theater at my first Alice Cooper concert on
the Brutal Planet tour…awesome!) were
booted to bring the originals back. At
all the interviews, the four originals talked about everything feeling right
again, and how wonderful it was to be together. It sounded fine if you ignored the two guys
who got hosed.
But things were not all
rosy, and were, in many cases, downright weird.
All of the members had
gone on record (HA!) about disliking The
Elder, the ill-fated concept album that was their worst commercial
performance. Yet, when they regrouped,
the first studio work they released in 1998 was Psycho Circus. This album
not only sounded more like The Elder than
any other of their other work, but had a tie in comic book series that pulled
names and situations from the story line of that album.
As a fan, Gene always
has more to do with comic book projects than Paul. That’s probably why his “Demon” character
morphed into the ringmaster, while Paul’s “Starchild” became a homely clown
ineffectively searching for love. Sometimes they’re more like an old, bickering
married couple than a world famous rock band.
Peter got fired
again…and again (and maybe again), until Eric Singer came back wearing the Catman make
up. When announced, I felt that move was equal parts blasphemy, and solid
marketing. (These are often the same
thing, come to think of it.)
Ace’s leaving was
smothered in awesomeness however. At the
end of what they were calling “The Farewell Tour,” he said it was a farewell
tour so he said farewell. Whether that’s true or not is up for debate, like
anything with these guys, as Paul said the “farewell” tour was to get rid of
the two originals who were now paid employees. (As has been every band member except
Gene and Paul since the initial split.)
Ace’s story is cooler, meaning I’ll stay with it. That way I can side with the guy from the
Bronx.
His replacement Spaceman
in 2002, Tommy Thayer, was Gene’s assistant and a former member of a KISS
tribute band, who taught Ace how to play his old stuff again. I’m sure that emotional high has to feel like
if Lucasfilm approached me, citing my years of quality playing with Star Wars
figures and offered me a role in the next movie. He’s
also a rarity for KISS as he’s one of only two members in the band’s history to
use his real name (along with Bruce). A
surprisingly large number of musicians were named Paul, but needed to change to
avoid confusion with one of the two leads…named Stanley Eisen.
Yeah, they were still
loud and catchy. Impressively, the new
line up produced two studio albums in 2009 and 2012, Sonic Boom and Monster. I realize two albums in ten years
wouldn’t normally count as impressive.
Then again, this is a band that can seem almost totally focused on the
past, with more “best of”s and Live albums than studio efforts.
I believe they’re up to Alive VII now. I will give them credit for the long delayed Alive IV with the Sydney Symphony, that was awesome.
Still, I found the rapid
zig zags on speeches about loyalty and trust unnerving. I know, deep down it’s usually all about
money, but did they really have to be so obvious about it? Learning that the two founders were planning
to, or may already be, training their replacements to allow the franchise to
live forever was not all that surprising.
In the non-make up
years, all four members publicly denounced that there was anything good to
say about the Hanna Barbera produced, made for TV disaster that was 1978’s KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park. Paul
and Gene went as far as saying Peter was right thinking the whole thing was
stupid when he refused to loop his dialogue.
Not only did it reference the made for TV mess, it had Penny Marshall playing “The Elder,” her brother Garry as the theme park owner, plus a new song written by KISS…
And I swear I’m not
making this up,
Performing as the
barbershop Ascot Five "Don't Tug My Ascot."
Gene and Paul, back in
the Eighties discussing taking off the make-up, pointed out that they were
horrified to see families and children in their audience, saying they lost
connections to what Rock and Roll is supposed to be…
And now we have this…
Hello KISS-ty??!?!?!
I’m pretty sure I gave
all the little girls and their mothers shopping at Claire’s that day a near
heart attack when they heard me scream, “WHAT THE HELL IS THAT?!?!?!”
The big kicker was when
Robin Williams died, Gene said a bunch of crap that was, even for him, over the
top offensive about depression and suicides. It struck me harder than his usual
opinionated rants because of some personal experiences.
I had a hard time displaying any of my KISS merchandise after that, and kept their
playlist off of my phone since then.
A little while ago, I heard one of their songs somewhere, and the old catchiness and power caught me again.
In thinking about Gene’s
sentiments, I remembered an old Dennis Miller quote (which I looked up and
found about six different versions of it.
Therefore I’m putting how I remember it, and not using quotation marks…So
sue me):
If your kid is
influenced by anything Gene Simmons has to say, you’re just not doing your job
as a *$%#ing parent.
The amazing part of that
sentiment is that Gene is an educated, intelligent and well-spoken individual,
who just enjoys being an enormous jerk sometimes. I mean, the man’s 2004 album was called ***hole.
The memory that really
allowed me to once more enjoy driving to the pointless but eminently
rock-out-able music again was one of Gene’s own quotes from a Bass Player interview in 1996.
"If people look to
me as a sort of leader, they're fooling themselves, 'cause I'm a complete
buffoon. I enjoy being one, and nobody does it better. Paul and I feel like the
two idiots in Bill and Ted's Excellent
Adventure. But we will outlast you
and your kind. We are the cockroaches that will inherit the earth. Revile us,
hate us after you're long gone, we'll still be here."
Basically, “Yes I admit I
can be butthead, but it’s by choice and I’m smart enough to make sure we remain
entertaining.”
I can’t really argue
with that, especially since that was the reason I became a Guy Gardner fan.
Plus, using the same
yardstick I did to declare the height of Alice Cooper’s awesomeness, Gene’s a
good father who’s raised intelligent, centered and expressive kids.
While listening to what
once was my favorite band, I considered breaking out the old KISS action
figures to put on the Marvel shelf.
(That location would be
technically correct based on their 1977 first, blood in the ink, comic book
appearance.)
I also considered
tracking down some of the Kissology concert DVDs to watch while exercising.
They feature the same grainy old bootlegs that people circulated on VHS for
years (for the nostalgia element?) but with enhanced sound. They also had a different version of each set
based on where they were purchased, because “The hottest band in the land” is
also “The most commercial band in the land.”
Then Siri forgot what
list she was playing, yet again. I ended
up switching back to my Alice Cooper playlist, and watching one of his concerts
that night on the treadmill.
I did watch the Scooby
Doo crossover, and frankly it was magnificent. (Thanx Kim!)
I think a big part of that comes from concepts that look horrifically lame in 1978 low budget TV special effects look amazing in modern animation.
It’s not only a sequel to Phantom of the Park but in some respects it’s a sequel to every comic book appearance of the band as extra dimensional superheroes. (Of which there are a large number thanks to Gene’s fandom.) It’s full of KISS tribute names for characters and locations, as well as Hanna Barbera tributes, and a generous helping of Jack Kirby influences.
What puts the piece over the top was the constant self referential, and self depreciating humor. The band recognizes where they are ridiculous and happily points it out, poking fun at their image, their personalities and even their hobbies. Their own manager, Doc McGhee voiced the cartoon manager, (Chip McGhoo) constantly hawking all manner of goofy KISS merchandise at every opportunity, complete with infomercial type displays.
There’s a Jay and Silent Bob voice cameo and, of course, the ultimate evil “Destroyer” was voiced by Darius (not really named “Hootie” of Hootie and the Blowfish) Rucker and looked to be the love child of MODOK and Galactus.
I think a big part of that comes from concepts that look horrifically lame in 1978 low budget TV special effects look amazing in modern animation.
It’s not only a sequel to Phantom of the Park but in some respects it’s a sequel to every comic book appearance of the band as extra dimensional superheroes. (Of which there are a large number thanks to Gene’s fandom.) It’s full of KISS tribute names for characters and locations, as well as Hanna Barbera tributes, and a generous helping of Jack Kirby influences.
What puts the piece over the top was the constant self referential, and self depreciating humor. The band recognizes where they are ridiculous and happily points it out, poking fun at their image, their personalities and even their hobbies. Their own manager, Doc McGhee voiced the cartoon manager, (Chip McGhoo) constantly hawking all manner of goofy KISS merchandise at every opportunity, complete with infomercial type displays.
There’s a Jay and Silent Bob voice cameo and, of course, the ultimate evil “Destroyer” was voiced by Darius (not really named “Hootie” of Hootie and the Blowfish) Rucker and looked to be the love child of MODOK and Galactus.
They’re not my favorites
anymore, there’s much more substance and depth to Alice’s stuff that makes me
listen to him more often. My tastes have also expanded to a much larger variety
of “good music” plus I still have an enormous and ever growing comedy
library.
However, there still is
the occasional afternoon, following a hard day’s work, when Paul’s powerful yet
melodic belting or Gene’s bass charged growls are still the best way to burn
away remnants of stress.
I’ll probably continue to revisit
their makeup festooned playlist a little more often in the future…
I won’t be buying those
variform DVD sets, and storage has led to damage and funkification of the
action figures. Fortunately where KISS is concerned, other ludicrous marketing
concepts are always available.
Click here for a weird Kiss mash up In a couple of weeks
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