We have been collecting this paper stuff for decades – every time we buy a collection we put all the strange little items that don’t fit any particular category in a drawer and concentrate on posting the regular stuff. We finally dug through this and found some great items – people have been buying them as fast as we are posting them…Check it out – some great, unusual items.
Gene Simmons, like many other musicians, should be on tour right now, but he made it very clear that KISS won’t return to their “End of the Road” farewell tour until the novel coronavirus is completely under control.
In a Facebook Live interview with United States ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa Scott Brown, Simmons was asked when KISS’ farewell tour would return to the road. Simmons responded, “First and foremost, it doesn’t matter about me, me, me and the band and all that stuff. The most important thing is to keep you guys safe, ’cause we love you. Without the fans, we’re nothing and we’re nobody. I’d be asking you, if you were next in line, if you’d like some fries with that. In fact, that person is cooler than I will ever be. So it’s less about self-aggrandizement and more about we are going out there once it’s safe.”
Simmons added, “Once we have a vaccine out there and the scientists — not the politicians — are telling us, ‘Okay, open the doors. Celebrate life. Go out there and enjoy yourself.’ Then we’re going out there.”
Simmons has been very vocal about taking the coronavirus seriously and has engaged with many fans on Twitter as of late encouraging them to wear masks to help mitigate the spread of COVID-19.
Just got in a FANTASTIC collection of photos from a private collector – Old, new, promos…all kinds of 8×10 glossy photographs. All singles – we don’t have multiples to sell, so grab the ones you want…
WE ARE FULLY OPEN AND SHIP ALL ORDERS OUT WITHIN ONE BUSINESS DAY!
Original KISS guitarist Ace Frehley has once again said that he is up for a reunion of the original band, but only if the price is right.
During an appearance earlier today (Monday, April 27 — his 69th birthday) on SiriusXM‘s “Trunk Nation”, Frehley stated about his former bandmates: “I texted Paul [Stanley] and Gene [Simmons] last week and just wished them well, and Peter [Criss]. And I got a text from Doc [McGhee, KISS manager]. Everybody’s okay — thank God. Knock on wood. Eric Singer‘s been sending me some silly texts [Laughs] ‘Cause me and Eric always got along really well on the road.
“Everything’s cool,” he continued. “What’s gonna happen is gonna happen. But everything is delayed at this juncture, so who knows? … I’m doing my own thing. Unless they come forward and the price is right, you’re not gonna see me anywhere close by.”
In the year and a half after KISS announced its “End Of The Road” farewell tour, fans wondered openly if original members Frehley and Criss would be involved in the trek, especially considering the apparent recent goodwill between Stanley and Simmons and Frehley. Ace‘s latest album “Spaceman” — a title suggested by Simmons himself — features two songs the pair wrote together, and the duo completed a joint summer 2018 tour of Australia, after which Frehley fired his solo backing band and hired Simmons‘s.
Two years ago, Frehley told VintageRock.com that “the only way” he would “seriously consider” taking part in “End Of The Road” is “if I took back my make-up and costume and my character — which I designed.” He added that current KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer “is not a bad guitar player, but he basically just mimics everything I wrote, and tries to imitate my persona. He’s been doing it for 15 years,” he said. “But the reality is I’m the original guy. And nobody can really copy the way I play guitar.”
He said Kiss were “doing our part” and “writing checks” for “important stuff,” continuing: “I just sent a nice big check to the children’s hospital here in L.A. because you not only have children suffering from this horrible thing, there are children who are also fighting cancer.” That led him to insist: “We have nothing to complain about. Stop complaining – I keep saying that all the time… There are some miserable things going on out there; people are losing their lives. … We’re in this together – the only way is the lonely way.”
Simmons confirmed that Kiss planned to fulfil their tour commitments, saying: “We’re gonna go back once it’s safe, once there’s a cure. We would never put our fans in danger, or ourselves.”
Five months after being accused of being “dishonorable and dishonest” by his brother Bob over a business matter, former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick has said that he is not going to air his dirty laundry in public.
Back in November, Bob, who co-wrote several songs for Kiss and served as a session guitarist on some of their albums, publicly called out Bruce — as well as Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons and Kiss’ manager Doc McGhee — for allowing autographed photos of the brothers to be sold without Bob’s permission. “This is called copyright infringement and an indication to all of you as to where my back stabbing brother Bruce is in all this!” Bob wrote, adding that Bruce has taken out a restraining order against him. “Disgraceful, uncalled for and a situation that will be answered in time!”
EVERY piece of merchandise at this link is between $1.00 and $3.00. Dozens and dozens of cool little obscure curiosities you may not find anywhere else.
WE ARE FULLY OPEN AND SHIP ALL ORDERS OUT WITHIN ONE BUSINESS DAY!
During an appearance on episode 19 of Richard Marx‘s “Social Distancing” talk show, KISS frontman Paul Stanley was asked how he is taking care of his voice on the “End Of The Road” tour, in light of the fact that many of the band’s songs are challenging to sing.
“Is my voice what it was 20 years ago, 30, 40 [years ago]? No,” Stanley replied (see video below). “A great athlete can’t replicate what they did in their early years. So I tend to think of myself in that way. Because vocals that I’ve done in the past almost were athletic in nature, and it’s not possible in the same way at this point.
“Somebody will come to me and say, ‘You don’t sound like you did on ‘Kiss Alive’.’ ‘Kiss Alive’ is what? Almost 50 years, or 45 years ago. And I said, ‘If you wanna hear me sound like that, put on the album.’ It’s not possible.”
He added: “What I found, interestingly, is that the singers that I know who do something similar to what I do, we all commiserate and we all talk to each other, and one of the first things we say when we meet up is, ‘Are you having a hard time hitting those notes?’ ‘Are you still singing in the original keys?’ And one of my friends said, ‘If I knew I would be singing this song in my 70s, I would have written it in a different key.'”
KISS ARMY – during these extraordinary times, join us in THE KISS ROOM as we broadcast from all over the place!
Matt Porter is joined by members of THE KISS ROOM HOUSE BAND, and even his wife and daughter, for the April issue of THE KISS ROOM.
It’s a different kind of KISS ROOM, but still jam packed with KISS talk and KISS tunes.
THE KISS ROOM HOUSE BAND shares an amazing set of tunes that were recorded separately but together, showings their amazing talent and the fact that We Are One.
Originally broadcast via Montco Radio on Friday, April 10, 2020
The heartache so many families are living through at not being able to see their loved ones is a sad reality of the moment we are living in.
Social distancing rules amid the global pandemic means we have a duty to stay away from our elderly relatives who are more vulnerable to this potentially deadly virus.
So many elderly people are being forced to celebrate birthdays and special days alone while their families try to come up with inventive ways to celebrate from a safe distance.
For Kiss co-founder Paul Stanley, he took to Twitter to celebrate a significant milestone in his father’s life – his 100th birthday.
The New York rhythm guitarist and co-lead vocalist of rock band Kiss is responsible for many of the group’s hits during the 1980s.
KISS has put the brakes on its tour, and like all of us, Gene is at home right in the middle of his ‘stay at home’ tour. He talks about how dangerous it is to gather in groups, the impact coronavirus has had on the music industry, and he thanks the first responders for all their help during this time.