“Ace’s is easily the best of the solo albums, although the bar is set pretty low”: In which Ace Frehley annoys Gene and Paul by releasing the best and most successful of the Kiss solos

Kiss famously released four solo albums on the same day. Just as famously, only one of them was truly worthy of the Kiss name – Ace Frehley’s

The four Kiss solo albums were all due to hit the stores on the same date – ‘Kissmas day’, September 18, 1978. They all had cool covers painted by Eraldo Carugati, reputedly right-hand man to Michelangelo on the Sistine Chapel. They were being backed by a hefty $2.5 million promotional campaign. And they were all ‘shipping platinum’. It all sounded very impressive.

Subsequently, a joke emerged that became received wisdom: they shipped platinum and returned double platinum. But Gene Simmons put the record straight, telling Classic Rock: “They all sold at least a million apiece.”

The surprise – and a kick in the balls for Simmons and Paul Stanley – was that Ace Frehley’s album was the most successful. What Ace delivered was a smoking, balls-out, hard-rock record with flashes of his goofball humour. The wayward guitarist even scored a Top 20 hit with a breezy version of the Russ Ballard song New York Groove. And without Gene and Paul around, he could sing on Ozone: ‘I’m the kind of guy who likes feelin’ high…

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