Monthly Archives: May 2025
Dave Grohl Presents KISS with ASCAP Founders Award – 2015 ASCAP Pop Awards
KISS – Lick It Up Tour | Quebec, QC (March 12th, 1984)
Cornerstone KISS Trading Card Series 2 Box at KISSArmyWarehouse.com!
Sealed Kiss Series 2 Trading Card Box. Box contains 36 packs, 9 cards per pack. Look for randomly inserted foil chase cards. Manufactured by Cornerstone in 1998.
Gene Simmons On Taking Back Ace And Peter Three Times: “Even Life Doesn’t Give You This Many Chances”
KISS bassist Gene Simmons addressed the band’s history with original members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss in a recent interview with Kyle Meredith.
Simmons reflected on KISS’s evolution through different lineups. He emphasized the unique opportunities given to former bandmates Frehley and Criss.
“I mean, we toured during the ’90s from about… I’m trying to think of it… When we unmasked, it must have been actually in the ’80s, so we had a few records out, as members tended to change within the band,” Simmons said. “Ace and Peter were in and out of the band three different times, if you can believe that. No other band would give anybody that many chances — nor does life, by the way.”
Simmons shared his perspective on the band’s decision to perform without their iconic makeup:
“So, Ace and Peter, bless ’em, have been in and out of the band three times, and as we got new members, we thought, ‘Well, why don’t we take the makeup off?’ And in retrospect, it didn’t matter. People wanted the makeup and those songs. And you’re always too close to something and you think, ‘Well, these are the rules.’ But you formed a band not to have rules.”
He then recalled a significant moment from their unmasked period:
“We took it together, and it was pretty special.” John 5 shares the last photo of Gene Simmons in full Kiss makeup and costume as he begins offering tours of his museum of Kiss memorabilia
When it comes to Kiss memorabilia, John 5 is like the proverbial kid in the candy store.
Hell, even at 54 he is a kid, especially compared to Kiss patriarchs Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, and even to his current bandmates in Mötley Crüe.
John 5’s Kiss fandom — stoked while growing up in the near suburbs of Detroit Rock City, in fact — has led him to accumulate a supersized collection of more than 2,500 items from 1973 to ’83, which he’s dubbed the Knights in Satan’s Service Museum of Kiss Memorabilia. He’ll be putting it on public display for the first time ever this month at a space in Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley, guiding fans through the experience himself.
But there’s a coveted latter-day item that won’t be part of the exhibition that is nevertheless near and dear to John’s heart — what is, by all accounts, the last photo of Simmons in full makeup and costume, taken backstage at New York’s Madison Square Garden following the group’s farewell concert on December 2, 2023.
It was a moment John — who’s co-written and played on songs for Stanley and original Kiss guitar player Ace Frehley — wasn’t sure he’d have, either. The timing of the show came near the end of Crüe’s World Tour, just as John 5, Nikki Sixx, Tommy Lee and Vince Neil were arriving stateside.
“It just evolved”: The Ace Frehley song that took over a decade to finish
The whole idea behind Kiss in the very beginning was simple: They wanted to be a unit and have complete creative freedom within that unity. While many people will argue that the makeup and pyrotechnics were just good markings, there was a lot more to the band than that.
When Paul Stanley was initially asked why he and the band were so keen on wearing make-up and inhabiting these characters, he said it was because he had grown frustrated with bands’ image, and how it didn’t look like musical outfits were separate entities. “Those ‘60s British groups all looked like real bands. No member of The Beatles could have fit into the Stones. No member of The Who could have been in the Dave Clark Five,” said Stanley, “You had unified images of those bands, and at the same time, there was an emphasis on the individual members.”
Gene Simmons added that their make-up didn’t just mean they looked like a unit, but they also had complete creative freedom. “We also took pride in having the same freedom The Beatles had,” confirmed Simmons, “Their philosophy was, ‘No matter what kind of music we do, it’s still The Beatles’. That’s what was amazing about them… The Beatles were not trapped in that way. They could do music hall, psychedelia – anything – and they did. Yet somehow it always sounded like The Beatles.”
You can certainly hear this creative freedom in their music, as while some of their records, such as Sonic Boom and Animalize, the band leaned heavily into their rock roots; however, they decided to apply disco sounds on their record Dynasty. Despite the changes in sound, the records are fundamentally Kiss, and nobody has ever questioned whether the sound is too left field for the band.
The image of the band brought with it a strange sense of unity. Even when members fell out with one another, it looked as though everything was fine within the band. Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons might be arguing, sure, but their characters in the lineup are alive and well, still rocking out to some of the greatest rock music ever made.
The band could only ever work as a unit, which is why Ace Frehley’s solo career didn’t take off in the way that he would have liked. Frehley contributed a great deal to Kiss’s music, as he was a fantastic guitar player; however, it apparently wasn’t enough for the rest of the band, and so he left to pursue his own projects.
This created a very frosty relationship between Frehley and Simmons, as while Frehley said he left because of creative differences, Simmons said that the guitarist was fired because he couldn’t control his substance abuse. Simmons went as far to call Frehley a “cancer,” and the two still have a troubled relationship to this day.
Frehley tried his best to have a successful career outside of the band following his fallout with Simmons, and while he succeeded to some degree, he never achieved the same heights he managed with the band. Despite still wearing his Kiss makeup when performing as a solo artist, there was no getting over the fact that people were more interested in his character as a member of Kiss than they were him as an individual.
That being said, there is no escaping the fact that he wrote some great songs as a solo artist. One of his most famous is ‘New York Groove’, which has succeeded in making its way onto the soundtracks of Hollywood movies and is considered a classic by all those who hear it. It shouldn’t come as a surprise that Frehley was capable of writing great songs, he had been doing for Kiss for years, and even though his connection to the band was severed, his connection to his art wasn’t.
Frehley has never put anything other than 100% into his work, which is best reflected in his track ‘Starship’. The song highlights Frehley’s unwavering approach to music, as he will never rush a song. If it doesn’t sound right, it won’t be released, which is why it took him so long to get this track out. He began writing it in the mid-2000s but didn’t end up releasing the track until 2014, as he couldn’t quite figure out how the song should sound. Eventually, the track evolved into something finished, but it took him a while to get the sound perfect.
KISS Solo Faces Blacklight Poster On Sale Only $11.99 at KISSArmyWarehouse.com!
KISS’ Gene Simmons reveals moment “Rock and Roll All Nite” was born and reflects on being a “chameleon”
For more than half a century, KISS’ Gene Simmons has been one of the most recognizable figures of rock and roll. Simmons rose to stardom as the “demonic” bassist and co-lead singer of the rock band formed in New York City in 1973.
“All my life I’ve been a chameleon. Everything is a costume,” Simmons said in an interview for “CBS Mornings” that aired on Wednesday.
But his devilish make-up and theatrical persona are a stark contrast to his very humble upbringing as the son of an immigrant single mother. Long before he became a KISS icon, he was known simply as Chaim Witz, meaning “life” in Hebrew.
You want to be in a rock band?” Simmons recalled his mother asking. “That’s not going to fly, babe.”
Before moving to New York at age 8, Simmons was born in Israel – a child of Jewish refugees from Hungary. His mother, Flora Klein, survived the Holocaust.
“After the horrific unimaginable life my mother went through where she saw her entire family, our family, wiped out in front of her face, every decision I was going to make I thought about my mother first,” Simmons said.
Simmons vowed to be there for his mother every step of the way, reminding himself, “Don’t break your mother’s heart. Don’t do it.”
He said it was an observation his mother made that inspired him to be a musician. While watching The Beatles perform on “The Ed Sullivan Show” one night, Simmons recalled his mother coming in and commenting in Hungarian.
“I’ll never forget this…she said something like, in Hungarian, ‘They’re really weird people.’ And at that point, I thought they’re cool,” Simmons said.
The birth of “Rock and Roll All Nite”
After making some money from singing background for other artists at New York City’s Electric Lady Studios, Simmons and his pal Paul Stanley went on to form the legendary band KISS in their early 20s.
Eddie Kramer, who worked with The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, agreed to produce and engineer their first demo. But they struggled in obscurity until a challenge from their label’s president led to one of the most famous lines in rock history.
While buying frozen hot dogs and a can of beans in San Francisco, Simmons recalls Stanley turning to him and humming some of the lyrics to the song that would later become the iconic 1975 hit “Rock and Roll All Nite.”
“We were in San Francisco, we went downstairs to buy frozen hotdogs and a can of beans. And Paul said, what do you think of this?”
“That’s really good. What do you got? He goes, ‘That’s all I’ve got,'” said Simmons after Stanley sang the chorus. They eventually put more verses together.
Kiss plays on the Italian TV show Discoring 1982
KISS M&Ms Display Case with Original Box and Bags of M&Ms
Very hard to find M&Ms Walmart display in original box with candy still inside! Will be boxed in another box with shipping cold packs. Don’t miss out on this hard to find item. See photos for condition looks close to mint condition.
KISS fan who paid $12,495 to be Gene Simmons’ roadie: ‘I’m going to die happy’
A KISS fan who paid a whopping $12,495 (£9,500) to be Gene Simmons’ roadie for the day insists he has zero regrets and he’ll “die happy”.
Back in March, The Demon hit international headlines when he offered fans the ‘Ultimate Gene Simmons Experience’ of being his personal assistant and roadie for the day on his North American tour.
As well as helping Simmons load in and set up at the venue, the $12,495 package also includes a plus one, a KISS rehearsal used bass guitar personally signed by Simmons, a signed setlist, an exclusive crew member T-shirt, hat and VIP laminate, plus a meal with Simmons.
Retired corrections sergeant Dwayne Rosado paid for the experience at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Bank, New Jersey on Monday 5th May, and he also brought along his son Zach.
Rosado, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 18 months ago, believes the roadie experience was “absolutely” worth the hefty price tag.
“You only live once, and I want to experience life,” he enthused to the New York Times. “I’m not going to die with a lot of money. I’m going to die happy.”
KISS – Destroyer Tour | Munich, DE (June 3rd, 1976) – 3 Szene Musik
KISS EXPO Promotion 2013 on FOX59 in Indianapolis Interview with Gene Simmons and Eric Singer
The Kiss song Gene Simmons regrets: “Do we really wanna play that?”
With their makeup and outfits, Kiss have always been a theatrical rock band. When they began in the early 1970s, they were something new and bold. They were leading the way for heavier rock, setting themselves apart from the classic rock and roll crowd. But as time went on, and as is always the case for pioneers, the rest of the world caught up, and soon, the band had regrets.
Regret is a harsh word, though. For a band like Kiss, you’d hope that they don’t have many, given the scale of success they’ve hit. They were a group that levelled everything up, daring other acts to be bolder, be more maximalist and be more out there, both in terms of their live shows and staging.
But a pioneer can’t be a pioneer for long. As is always the case for artists forging a new path, others will soon start walking it, and people will soon walk steps ahead. Kiss definitely felt that, not so much in terms of their unrivalled showmanship but simply in the fact that while they opened the door to heavier rock, more modern acts absolutely kicked it down.
All of this comes back to one song, and one of the band’s biggest hits – ‘I Was Made For Lovin’ You’. Gene Simmons can still recall the exact moment when Paul Stanley first brought the track to the band, so much so that he gave Howard Stern a playback of the exact conversation.
“So he walks in, ‘got an idea for you’, ‘what’s it called?’, ‘I Was Made For Loving You’, ‘Ah that’s great’”, Simmons remembered. For the next part, for a truly immersive effect, let’s lay this out like a script as the bassist gave a line-by-line rundown of the moment the track was introduced.
“‘What’s the first line?’” Simmons began, and the rest went like this:
“‘Tonight’
‘What’s the second line?’
‘I wanna give it all to you.’
‘Yeah, I know what it is, that’s cool.’
‘In the darkness.’
‘In the darkness? Yeah, that rocks’
‘Something I wanna do’
‘That’s really cool! What’s my part?’”
Bruce Kulick Opens Up on Recording First Full Album With Kiss, Reveals What Gene and Paul Were Like
1984 and 1985 must have been an utter whirlwind for Bruce Kulick. From getting an invite to provide some “ghost guitar” on Kiss‘ “Animalize” album, to being asked to temporarily fill in for Mark St. John, and ultimately being invited to join the band full-time, is the stuff fairy tales are made of. But perhaps most memorable of all was his first full album recording experience with the band, which resulted in 1985’s “Asylum”.
During an interview with Chaoszine, Kulick looked back on this memorable time in his and Kiss’ careers and recalls the excitement he experienced, both professionally and personally.
“‘Asylum’, I thought I won the lottery when I was a temporary member,” Kulick admitted (transcribed by Ultimate Guitar). “So now, I’m a full-time member. And obviously starting an actual record from the ground up, meaning songwriting and recording, not coming in as a ghost guitar player was obviously very exciting.”
I Was Made for Lovin´ You (metal cover by Leo Moracchioli)
Gene Simmons From “KISS” Interview With Bill Wills – 5-8-25
KISS Reunion Tour Standup at KISSArmyWarehouse.com!
Very hard to find Reunion Tour Standup featuring original KISS lineup. Standup is six feet tall when setup. These are close to mint condition. Comes folded into thirds like they originally came in 1999.