03/26/2019

Review: Explosive KISS says farewell at Mohegan

Classic band wraps it up at 'End of the Road'

By Michael Chaiken / Republican American

I was a little too young for the beginning.

But at least I got to see the “End of the Road” before I was too old for rock and roll (but too young to die, to paraphrase the Jethro Tull song).
Kiss is making its final rounds as a band, having announced their intent to retire after one touring last hurrah.

But, at the Mohegan Sun Arena on Saturday night, rather than a crew of musicians intent on taking it easy on their victory lap, the four-man band – guitarist Paul Stanley, bassist Gene Simmons, lead guitarist Tommy Thayer, and drummer Eric Singer – stepped on the gas for their “End of the Road” tour, leaving the competition in their dust. They lived up to their self-proclaimed billing as “the greatest band in the world.”
Kiss had three albums out before I bought their first big hit, 1975’s “Alive!” Through the years, I followed their musical hijinks – from the artistic breakthrough of “Destroyer” to their first album without makeup “Lick It Up,” to the revelatory acoustic effort for their “Unplugged” special on MTV and then to the return of the makeup on “Psycho Circus.”

There were moments where I thought I was too cool for school for Kiss. But I always managed to gravitate back to them.
Despite the years of my Kiss-story, though, I never got to see them live, either as a fan or music critic.

“You mean you’ve never seen Kiss before,” said a buddy of mine on Saturday. “Oh, dude, I’m so happy for you. Wait till you see this.”

He made sure he didn’t give any spoilers. He said, “Just watch.”

His declaration of the band’s live prowess proved to be well-founded.

03/24/2019

KISS deliver the greatest show on Earth with ‘The Final Tour Ever’

“You wanted the best, you got the best”

By James Shotwell / substreammagazine.com

The legacy of Kiss is one of style over substance where songs serve to sell the live show and live shows exist to sell the merchandise. The band has had numerous top 10 singles during their forty-five-year run in rock music, but in many ways, they have always been considered outcasts. Blame it on the makeup they wear or the fact they only take themselves as seriously as the need to at any point, but rock diehard at large have always looked down on the group as something existing just outside the realm what is considered cool.

What those so-called rock purists don’t realize is that being outside what is considered cool is exactly where bands should want to exist.

Rock and roll has always been the sound of outsiders. Though it was stolen from its creators and repackaged for mass marketability, the heart and soul of rock has remained the same since its inception. Kiss has always represented the original intention of the genre. Remove the clothes and makeup and nonstop pyrotechnics that accompanies every performance and you have a band writing songs for the working class that are grounded in everyday reality. They sing to inspire as much as they do to entertain, and their final tour is an extension of that idea in every way.

03/24/2019

Long Island KISS fans mark band's last tour stop

Final Long Island road show brings dose of nostalgia for rock lovers

By David J. Criblez / Newsday

Ron Buckley keeps his holiday tree up all year long in the cozy den of his Middle Island home. “It’s a KISSmas tree,” says Buckley, who has garnished it with the rock band's action figures, bulbs and a snow globe besides a giant logo that stands in for a star. In fact, the nurse has decorated his home in style of his favorite group, KISS, which brings its “End of the Road” farewell tour to NYCB Live's Nassau Coliseum on Friday.

“KISS gives you a good feeling and puts you in a different mindset,” says Buckley, 37, who has both a spare bedroom and a storage facility filled with thousands of KISS collectibles. “There’s no political view point and they are not preaching anything. This band is focused on having a good time.”

The band's costumed and face-painted characters — the Demon (bassist-vocalist Gene Simmons), the Starchild (guitarist-vocalist Paul Stanley), the Catman (drummer Eric Singer) and the Spaceman (guitarist Tommy Thayer) — are superheroes who rock. But, their fans don’t just listen to KISS — they live and breathe KISS. From their clothes to their bedroom walls to their family vacations, KISS is factored in.

ROCK HOLIDAY
“KISS takes me back to my childhood,” says Mike Brunn, 48, of Farmingdale, who has been a dedicated fan for 43 years. “I remember sitting on my bed looking at their album covers and listening to their music. KISS brings me to that place and allows me to escape reality.”

Brunn takes his family on a KISS Kruise every fall, when the band plays multiple shows on board and hosts cooking classes, drum competitions, guitar pick-throwing contests and songwriting master classes like the one he and his daughter Courtney took the past few years with Simmons.

“Me and my dad now have a song that we wrote that’s legally copyrighted,” recalls Courtney, 20. “It’s something I never would have done without Gene’s help.”

03/22/2019

Paul Stanley Interview with NY POST

As KISS says farewell, Paul Stanley reveals why the band is taking the makeup off

By Chuck Arnold / NY Post

KISS is giving a goodbye smooch to their fans with their End of the Road farewell tour, which hits Nassau Coliseum on Friday and Madison Square Garden on Wednesday. (The trek returns to the area in August.) New York native Paul Stanley — the 67-year-old co-founder and co-lead singer of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band — dishes on his KISS alter ego, his makeup secrets and being “Dressed To Kill” in Chelsea.

So why did you guys decide to hang up the makeup after all these years?
We take tremendous pride in what we do, and we have a tremendous responsibility, not only to the fans but to our legacy. If we were a band wearing T-shirts and jeans, we could do this into our 90s, but . . . we’re carrying 30 to 40 pounds of gear and running around and making it look easy. Our idea was to make sure that, before we reach a point of diminishing returns, we go out and, in essence, take a victory lap. We don’t wanna go out with a whimper; we wanna go out with a bang.

Will you miss wearing the makeup?
It’s so much a part of me that whether it’s on my face or in my blood, it’s always there . . . So whether I ever put it on again or not, it’s part of me. The tattoo is on the inside, also.

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