04/30/2015

BILLBOARD INTERVIEW WITH PAUL STANLEY AND GENE SIMMONS

For 40 years, Kiss has built a legacy on being a must-see live spectacle, with elaborate makeup, costumes and pyro that can still pack arenas and stadiums around the globe. And indeed, the band�s founding members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons had finished a sold-out South American stadium tour just hours prior to returning to Los Angeles.

The occasion? The ASCAP Pop Music Awards, where Simmons and Stanley accepted the ASCAP Founders Award, an annual honor given to a music pioneer. Though Kiss will continue to tour throughout the year, with treks that are about to take them into Germany, the Czech Republic and Australia, �it was always about the songs,� Stanley said in his acceptance speech. �For bands that last 40 years, it�s not about the smoke, it�s not about the makeup, it�s about the songs."

Stanley, 62, and Simmons, 65, are the only founding members who still tour as Kiss, though they did reunite with Ace Frehley and Peter Criss for the band�s 2014 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. But in an interview with Billboard, the seemingly ageless rockers didn�t spend much time dwelling on the importance of certain trophies. Instead, they seemed genuinely grateful to be in the position of being a still-vital draw on the road that, Stanley says, can crank out some solid new tunes when the inspiration strikes.

Billboard: Congrats on receiving the ASCAP Founders Award. Given all the attention paid to your live show, what does winning a songwriting-based award mean to you?

Paul Stanley: I believe we come from a philosophy that really covets and looks up the source, whether it was the Brill Building and Goffin and King or Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, or the Gershwin Brothers or Lennon-McCartney, it really comes down to a great song. For us to be feted this way, join the company that have come before, it doesn�t suck.

How did Dave Grohl come to be selected for your introduction tonight?

Stanley: I�m friends with Dave, and really when I said would you come and do this he jumped at it. Look Dave is arguably the last major rock star of the last three decades. He�s filling stadiums worldwide because he understands his roots and that�s what we�re about. Some people have forgotten where we started and who inspired us.

It�s been just over a year since you received another distinct honor, being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. A year out, what does that recognition mean to you now?

Gene Simmons: I�m not sure. When you�re busy doing your own stuff it�s like running a race. You try not to look over your shoulder to see who else is in the race, you do the best you can. I think there�s a decided difference between the pop songwriters who are magnificent in their own way. I could never do what they do, which is to sit down and write a song and figure out which artist is gonna sing the song. I can�t do that. I think what we�re best at is writing songs for who we are. It�s an individual sort of approach, it�s defined, it�s for the fans. I don�t know that you can be all things to everybody, which is why there are different kinds of music. There are balladeers and guitar slingers and so forth. If your songs connect with the fans and they pump their fists in the air and go, �Yeah!!� that�s when a song really works. That�s the electric church of it. The glory hallelujah of it.

How much time do you still spend these days writing new music? And has that process changed from when you first started out?

Stanley: I think at this point I write when there�s a reason to write. To sit down, there are so many outlets to be creative and certainly the recording industry or what�s left of it is really in shambles. The only reason to record at this point or write songs is to make a statement about the current band, and that we don�t only rely on our old catalog. I think we�re very fortunate to have come out when we did, and to not be relying upon an industry that has basically committed suicide.

Simmons: We�ve been around for 41 years, but you know what Paul just said is actually true. Don�t misunderstand, we�re not complaining. We have very good lives, the arenas and stadiums fill up, we can go anywhere in the world and we have a ball. It is really -- maybe profoundly is the right word -- but it�s really sad for the new artists. Where�s the next Elvis, where�s the next Beatles, where's the Zeppelin? They�re out there but they don�t have a chance. They don�t have a chance because once upon a time we had record companies, and they would support you and have point of purchase material and they would give you advances. In other words, they gave you the air to breathe to find yourself and spend the time to learn how to run.

Stanley: Well they championed you and nurtured you.

Simmons: And that�s what�s missing. So the next big band, the next Zeppelin, what are they gonna do? Give away their music for free? They�re gonna be living in their mom�s basement, unfortunately, and they�re never gonna get the chance that we did which is the saddest part of all for the new bands because there should always be a new generation of bands.

This year marks the 40th anniversary of KISS as a band. Will you be celebrating that milestone?

Stanley: It�s interesting because for us, everyday is a celebration, everyday is a milestone. The idea that 40 years is more significant than 39 was? It doesn�t affect us. We literally got off a plane yesterday morning from Sao Paolo, 70,000 people were at the show. And all the other shows were comparable to that. So the idea of going out and making some sort of extra celebration? Every night we hit the stage is a celebration. It�s a victory dance, it�s a victory lap. Against all the people who said it would never work, against all the people who said it was ridiculous. We won. 

04/30/2015

Dave Grohl Hails KISS at ASCAP Pop Awards: Read His Speech in Full

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You could draw a straight line from KISS in its 1970s heyday to the Foo Fighters' ascent 20 years later -- both arena acts delivering rock with a purpose --  so it was fitting that Foos frontman Dave Grohl was chosen to present Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley with the ASCAP Founders Award. What those in attendance at Wednesday's ASCAP Pop Music Awards in Hollywood might not have expected, however, is the continuing connection between the two camps: their kids' grade school.

Taking a light, reflective and personal approach, Grohl delivered a solid homage that began from his own childhood days as a proud cadet in the KISS army. The sentiment of the speech was clearly appreciated, as Simmons later declared, "Dave Grohl and the Foo Fighters are carrying the flag that we hope will inspire the next generation of young kids."

Read Grohl's tribute in its entirety below.
 
Picture this: Springfield, Virginia, 1976. A skinny young boy with shaggy brown hair on a yellow yard sale bicycle brings home a copy of the album Destroyer, his first KISS record. Everybody remembers their first KISS record, and this is how I remember mine.

Up until that point, it had been mainly Beatles and Carly Simon, maybe a little Phoebe Snow, f---in� 10cc. But the album cover alone was enough to make me break my old piggy bank into a thousand pieces and scrape up enough lawn-mowing money to give it straight to Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons.

With nuclear anticipation, I let the needle drop on that legendary intro to "Detroit Rock City," perhaps the greatest introduction to any rock 'n' roll album ever recorded. It filled my speakers and my imagination. Thirty-four minutes later and 27 seconds later, KISS had filled my soul. I was now a member of the infamous KISS army.

Before long, my room had become a f---ing shrine. Posters of these four musical monsters lined my walls action figures filled my shelves and KISS albums overtook my once A.M,-friendly record collection. I was converted�

Every morning, I would wake up in my tiny bedroom and take a good look at my superheroes before walking to school. They got me through those years and ultimately inspired me to follow this unreasonable dream of becoming a professional rock 'n' roll musician.
One hundred million albums. One hundred million f---ing albums. Countless hit singles, record-breaking concert attendance. They even made fuckin� disco look cool with �I Was Made For Lovin You.� Raise your hand if you can say the same thing.

I remember the KISS radio, which they just showed on screen -- I'm so happy that they actually have remnants of this f---ing masterpiece of technology. I remember the KISS radios advertised on TV -- "Hear all of your favorite KISS songs on your official KISS radio!" I imagined it was futuristic piece of technology and my direct link to my musical gods, so I ordered one... C.O.D., without even asking for permission from my struggling schoolteacher mother.

I'll never forget the day it arrived. The mailman knocked on the door, my mother took one look at this thing and said, I didn't f---ing order that. Then she sent it away.

Forty years later, my love of KISS is still strong. And these days I still spend every morning before school with Paul Stanley� in the parking lot of our kids� f---in� elementary school, chatting about Zeppelin and Electric Lady and touring and school fundraisers. So I'd say that my unreasonable dream definitely came true. And I finally got my KISS radio -- it's the cheapest f---ing A.M. radio I have eve seen in my life! With the KISS logo on it. Nice one, Gene.

So without further adieu, it is my great honor to say: you wanted the best, and you got the best. The hottest band in the world -- KISS!

04/29/2015

KISS To Receive ASCAP Founders Award Tonight

The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) will present rock heavyweights KISS with the prestigious ASCAP Founders Award at its 32nd annual ASCAP Pop Music Awards tonight, April 29 in Hollywood. The exclusive, invitation-only gala takes place at the Loews Hollywood Hotel in Los Angeles, CA.The ASCAP Founders Award goes to ASCAP�s pioneering songwriters who have made exceptional contributions to music by inspiring and influencing their fellow music creators. Past recipients include  Sir Paul McCartney, Smokey Robinson, Patti Smith, Steely Dan, Rod Stewart, James Taylor, Steven Tom Waits, Stevie Wonder and Neil Young.

KISS is one of the most influential rock and roll bands of all-time, selling over 100 million albums worldwide in their 40-year career. Formed in the early 1970s, KISS has achieved staggering career milestones, boasting decades of record-breaking tours around the globe.  Today, the KISS �brand� has infiltrated pop culture with its unforgettable personas Starchild, Demon, Spaceman and Cat.  With hits like �Strutter,� �Shout it Out Loud,� �Detroit Rock City,� �Rock and Roll All Nite,� �Christine Sixteen,� �I Was Made for Lovin� You� and �Beth,� KISS has 28 gold albums, the most of any American rock band, and in 2014 they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. As the band continues their 40th Anniversary World Tour with 2015 tours in Japan, South America and Australia � founding band members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons also celebrate 40 years as members of ASCAP.

The 32nd ASCAP Pop Music Awards precede the 10th annual ASCAP �I Create Music� EXPO, the only national conference dedicated to the craft and business of songwriting and composing. The EXPO takes place April 30th � May 2nd, 2015 at the Loews Hollywood Hotel in Los Angeles, CA. Many of the biggest names in music have shared their wisdom and music at the EXPO, including Jon Bon Jovi & Richie Sambora, Jackson Browne, Lindsey Buckingham interviewed by Sara Bareilles, Dr. Luke, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Quincy Jones, Randy Newman, Katy Perry, Tom Petty, Carly Simon, Justin Timberlake in conversation with Bill Withers and Ann & Nancy Wilson (Heart). For more details, visit www.ascap.com/expo.

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