07/31/2014

KISS COMING TO SPAC

By Don Wilcock

Paul Stanley struts like a man who�s having the last laugh.

To those who would dismiss his band Kiss as a bad joke in makeup and high heels, he points to their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this year. To those critics who have refused to take their music seriously, he talks with pride about the group�s 40th anniversary tour that includes a stop Tuesday night at Saratoga Performing Arts Center.

�Going out on this 40th-anniversary tour is a way to restate who we are and put our eight-inch heels firmly back on the ground and let people know that the legend lives, that everything they�ve heard remains true,� Stanley said during a phoned press conference with rock writers around the country. �When we started, there were no shows like us. It reached the point where many bands had Kiss shows. Any band with money can do a Kiss show, but no band can be Kiss.�

The freaky makeup and bombastic stage show are what put Kiss on the map, but 40 years in, Paul Stanley feels it�s time journalists considered the music behind the glitter.

�There were no bombs or lasers inside those albums we sold,� he said. �The songs have stood the test of time, and anybody who fails to see that, denigrates it or marks it with smart-ass remarks when they�re introducing us like (Rolling Stone Magazine publisher Jan) Wenner did (at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction) about our tight pants and makeup or whatever he said, is embarrassing himself. He may have a few burnouts who share his view and snicker with him, but they�re in the vast minority. The joke�s on him.�

Not that flamboyant staging isn�t an important part of the Kiss anniversary tour.

�I believe this is the greatest and best stage we�ve ever had. We took it to Europe and it was a huge success,� Stanley said. �We call it the spider stage because the lights are actually in the shape of a spider. The legs are actually dangling down on the stage and move. I wanted the stage this time where the lights and the stage were one instead of having the lights hanging from the ceiling.�

The Kiss sound and image have changed little in 40 years, but their lifestyle has. They�ve now been seen in public without their makeup, and they have private lives.

�Clearly there was a time when backstage was hedonism at its finest. When you�re given the keys to the candy store, you tend to eat a lot of candy. I certainly had a sugar high. So, over the years that obviously changed,� he said. �Over to the side of the stage certain nights, I see my little ones in their pajamas waiting for the show to be over to go to bed or family, which is something which at one point had no place in my life.�

And like the general public, this band�s attitude toward the military has become one of wholehearted support.

�As far as Wounded Warriors and USO, we have been very vocal over the past years about our obligation to our troops and the people who serve voluntarily and put themselves in harm�s way so that we can live in a free society and sadly at some point it seems some of us take it for granted,� Stanley said. �These freedoms we have come at a huge price to people who go unrewarded and unheralded for what they do. So over the years on various tours we have given a dollar from each ticket (to the Wounded Warriors and USO) and that�s what we�re doing once again. There�s nothing corny about celebrating this great country.�

If You Go

What: Kiss 40th Anniversary Tour with openers Def Leppard

When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday

Where: Saratoga Performing Arts Center

Tickets: www.livenation.com

Callout: �This 40th anniversary tour is a way to restate who we are and put our eight-inch heels firmly back on the ground and let people know that the legend lives.�

07/30/2014

KISS CELEBRATES 40TH ANNIVERSARY WITH SUMMER TOUR

by Joe Szczechowski

In celebration of its 40th anniversary, American rock legends KISS are in the midst of a summer tour that lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Paul Stanley calls �a victory lap.�

�To be able to have the privilege of going out on stage and performing 40 years on is incredible,� Stanley said in a recent press teleconference. �This is a vindication and a huge celebration for us and our fans.�

On the tour, which stops Sunday, August 3 at Camden, New Jersey�s Susquehanna Bank Center, Stanley and his bandmates � Gene Simmons (lead vocals and bass), Eric Singer (drums and vocals), and Tommy Thayer (lead guitar and vocals) � are being joined by special guests Def Leppard. The Dead Daisies open the 7 p.m. Susquehanna Bank Center show. Tickets are available at ticketmaster.com.

It's been a good year for Stanley and KISS. On April 8, Stanley's autobiography, �Face the Music: A Life Exposed,� was released to positive reviews. It landed at No. 2 on the New York Times "Hardcover Nonfiction" best sellers list. Later that week, KISS finally received its long overdue induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In May the band released �KISS 40,� a two-disc retrospective album. On Aug. 12, �4th and Loud,� a new television series documenting Stanley and Simmons� foray into Arena League Football as co-owners of the LA KISS premieres on AMC. A few weeks ago KISS confirmed its first Las Vegas residency. �KISS Rocks Vegas� will see the band perform nine shows at The Joint inside the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino between November 5th and 23rd.

If all that weren't enough, reviews of the current North American tour with Def Leppard (which wraps up in Houston, Texas on August 31) have ranged from positive to positively glowing. Stanley makes it clear that even after 40 years, KISS is not about to rest on its laurels.

The current tour is the first time fans in the U.S. will get to see the unique and interactive �spider stage� that Stanley designed for last year�s European tour in support of the band�s 2012 �Monster� album. Fans can also expect all of the bells and whistles that are KISS�s trademark � levitating platforms, pyro, explosions, fire breathing, and band members flying over the audience.

But Stanley points out that all of the visual effects would mean little if KISS wasn't first and foremost musically a great band.

�Ultimately it's got to be great music,� he says. �Anybody can set off bombs and fireworks and all the rest. Any band with money can do a KISS show, but no other band can be KISS. We are a rock band and have always been a rock band. Our roots are in bands that we loved growing up. We enhanced it with a great show, but ultimately nobody will buy � for decades � music that isn't good. The songs have stood the test of time.�

Fans can expect to hear classics like �Shout It Out Loud,� �Deuce,� �Love Gun,� �Detroit Rock City,� �Black Diamond,� �Lick It Up,� and of course, �Rock and Roll All Night.� Sometimes criticized for a stagnant set list, the band has been switching songs in and out more often on this tour than in the past. Rarely heard songs like �King of the Nighttime World,� �Makin' Love,� �War Machine,� and �Hide Your Heart� have been performed over the past few weeks.

Stanley says Def Leppard is a perfect fit as an opening act for KISS.

�We've always tried to have great bands on tour with us. Now more than ever, we want to make sure that people get their money�s worth,� he said. �To bring Def Leppard along means that everybody gets to hear a huge catalog of songs that were all hits and that all mean something to them. Def Leppard is just a great band and it's a great way to spend an evening during the summer.�

As it has in the past, KISS is once again supporting our military on the current tour. KISS and Def Leppard have hired two veterans as roadies for the tour, and are donating a portion of the proceeds from the tour to the Wounded Warrior Project, an organization that assists injured service members.

�We have been very vocal over the years about our obligation to our troops and to the people who serve voluntarily and put themselves in harm�s way so that we can live in a free society,� Stanley says. �I can't say enough about the people who serve on our behalf. What we do wouldn't be possible without what they do. I love being on stage and letting people know that there's nothing corny about patriotism; there's nothing corny about celebrating this great country.�

There was a time when being a KISS fan could get you ridiculed by, ostracized from, or in a fight with other music fans. Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave guitarist Tom Morello reiterated that fact in his passionate, eloquent, and all-around wonderful Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction speech. KISS was despised by critics, feared by parents, and literally demonized by some religious zealots. As Morello said, �KISS was never a critic�s band. KISS was a people�s band.�

�Over time, the people on the street became the critics; the people on the street became the executives; the people on the street outlived the critics,� Stanley says. �That's part of our victory celebration � the fact that we have outlived the critics and the naysayers � and in essence our fans have taken over.�

KISS fans, or the KISS Army, as they are known, are among the most avid, most dedicated fans in music. Many have stuck with the group through good times and bad over its entire 40-year history.

�It's incredible to come back to cities and see multi-generations of fans. It's a source of pride for us that we can have a six-year-old, a 16-year-old, and a 60-year-old in the audience, and we�re all part of this tribe,� Stanley says. �I think you can�t have the kind of dedication that we have from our fans unless they sense the same dedication to them from us. The only way that you can be in KISS is if you have the ultimate respect, not only for the band, but for the fans, because they're intertwined. We may not always do what makes every fan happy, but we stick to our guns and we do what we believe in.�

Stanley believes there�s a reason classic rock artists like KISS appeal not only to older fans, but to a growing segment of young fans as well.

�The reason people still buy tickets to see the classic acts is because you know we will deliver the goods,� he says. �There are countless acts nowadays that have downloads in huge numbers, but you don�t want to go see them live, because they haven't learned their craft. They sing on a song that was put together in somebody's living room on a computer and then auto-tuned. You know damn well that those people are not going to be able to put on a show.

�The ones who have enough money to put on a great show are invariably dependent upon a bunch of dancers jumping over each other and a microphone that isn't turned on,� he adds. �I don't want to hear this nonsense that it's impossible to dance around and sing. It didn't stop the Temptations. It didn't stop Ike and Tina Turner. It didn't stop James Brown. When you come to see KISS, you know that you're seeing the real deal � something that has been proven time and time again.�

Some things have changed for Stanley and KISS. Once a rock and roll bad boy, he�s now a married father of four.

�Clearly there was a time when backstage was hedonism at its finest,� he says. �When you're given the keys to the candy store you tend to eat a lot of candy. I certainly had a sugar high. Over the years that obviously changed. I now look over to the side of the stage certain nights and see my little ones in their pajamas waiting for the show to be over to go to bed.�

Stanley says his primary motivation for performing with KISS has not changed, however.

�The core of why I got into this and the reason the band got together in the first place was to make music,� he says. �I think we've all grown into a different realm of our lives. I've got a family and the Bacchanalia that was backstage at one point is not there anymore. But the celebration at the core of it � which is celebrating life and the freedom to be who you are � has never changed.�

07/30/2014

REVIEW: KISS DOMINATES AT JIFFY LUBE LIVE

Review by Alex Messick

The KISS army is arguably one of rock�s most devoted fan bases, thanks to a combination of careful marketing, and an intense live show. The KISS army came out in full force on Friday night to Jiffy Lube Live in Bristow, VA. Decked out in face paint, band t-shirts, and even replica costumes of KISS members themselves, the audience was in for a show that was truly a spectacle to behold. Newly inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, KISS set out on a summer tour for the books with support from none other than the legendary Def Leppard.

The amphitheater at Jiffy Lube Live was packed, and a deafening roar arose when the black curtain shielding the stage from view finally dropped at 9:45 PM, to the opening riff of �Psycho Circus.� KISS plays to the audience like no other, just as one would expect from a band that has come to define rock and roll bravado. Posing for photographers and pointing and waving to fans, the band made the show feel almost intimate, which is rarely a word used to describe a show at one of the largest venues in the area. The stage was dominated by a giant metal spider apparatus which, unfortunately, became stuck during their opening sequence leaving drummer Eric Singer blocked from view until the fifth song, when the band left the stage so that the spider could be rendered operational once more. The giant spider personified rock and roll excess as it dominated the stage and used its mechanical arms to lift band members up and down on small platforms.. As one would expect from seasoned professionals, the band played through the technical difficulties like nothing happened.

After their brief exit from the stage after, �Hotter Than Hell� (during which the demon himself Gene Simmons breathes fire), the show went on. Though Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons are 62 and 64 respectively, they played through the 15 song set with fake blood, fire breathing, and even a short flight into the audience on wires without losing a bit of energy or skipping a beat.

If nothing else, KISS proved that no band has to embrace the �aging rocker� archetype after they hit fifty. Gene Simmons still unfurled and flicked his tongue, licking his bass and breaking just as many hearts as ever, while Paul Stanley and Tommy Thayer gyrated their hips and leaped around the stage in platform boots with an impressive balance of grace and�well, balance.

More than anything, the show was fun, and the set list was tastefully chosen. Fifteen songs provided just the amount of time to let loose and enjoy the show without getting bored. The production kept the audience fixated with sparks, fog, and explosions perfectly synchronized to the music. They played a good mix of classics from their extensive discography, and finished off the night with the immortal anthem �Rock and Roll All Nite,� to a roaring audience.

No matter what kind of music you are a fan of, everyone should go to a KISS concert at least once in their lifetime to see rock and roll done the right way.

07/30/2014

KISS rocks vegas (November 5-23) The The Hardrock Hotel and Casino

Rock �n� roll legends KISS celebrate 40 years as music icons with their first-ever residency, KISS Rocks Vegas, at The Joint inside Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas starting Wednesday, Nov. 5 through Sunday, Nov. 23. Show time is 8 p.m.

Ticket for KISS Rocks Vegas are on sale now. To purchase tickets or for more information, visit the Hard Rock Hotel box office, www.axs.comor charge-by-phone at 1-888-9-AXS-TIX. VIP ticket and room and show packages are available at www.hardrockhotel.com.

�What happens in Vegas will not stay in Vegas, not if we have anything to do with it. We intend to blow the roof off the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino,� said Gene Simmons, founding member of KISS.

Four decades after beginning its exemplary journey as one of the leading rock �n� roll bands in the world, KISS continues to make waves with one of the loudest, most over-the-top, non-stop parties at The Joint. Designed exclusively for The Joint in partnership with AEG Live, the chart-topping band will unleash its signature elaborate set designs, jam-packed set list, intense pyrotechnics and much more for nine of the biggest shows in KISS performance history.

�KISS Army, get ready! America�s most iconic band is coming to America�s most exciting city. Rock and Rock Hall of Famers KISS are bringing their show to Las Vegas for their first-ever residency. For 40 years, KISS has been putting on some of the most exciting shows in music and we finally got them where they should be � Las Vegas � at The Joint. We couldn�t be more excited to see what they�re gearing up for!� exclaimed Bobby Reynolds, vice president of booking for AEG Live Las Vegas.

KISS Rocks Vegas Dates:

Wednesday, Nov. 5
Friday, Nov. 7
Saturday, Nov. 8
Wednesday, Nov. 12
Friday, Nov. 14
Saturday, Nov. 15
Wednesday, Nov. 19
Saturday, Nov. 22
Sunday, Nov. 23

*show time is 8 p.m.

07/30/2014

RIP DICK WAGNER

RIP Dick Wagner. He burned on Alice, Lou Reed & uncredited on Destroyer & some of our contemporaries. Sad day.

07/30/2014

THE STARCHILD STEPS UP

KISS co-founder Paul Stanley talks about his new book, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, a KISS without him, and the band's current 40th anniversary tour

By Alan K. Stout Weekender Correspondent

For Paul Stanley, 2014 has been a very good year. So far, in just the past seven months, he has seen:

�His band, KISS, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

�His band, KISS, hit the road with fellow hard-rock legends Def Leppard, where they've been packing them in every night.

�His band, KISS, note its 40th anniversary.

�His autobiography, �Face The Music: A Life Exposed,� become a New York Times best-seller.

�It's all terrific,� said Stanley in an interview with the Weekender, adding that he was surprised by the success of the book, which debuted at No. 2 on the prestigious book list.

�It would be crazy for me to say that I expected that,� he said. �That would be nuts. It's something that I'm very, very proud of and pleased with, because no matter how much you may hope for a certain response and think that it's warranted, it doesn't mean it will happen. Thankfully, the book has connected with people.�

As the front man of one of the most successful rock bands of all-time, you'd think that Stanley, 62, might have penned a book years ago. When he finally did � and was the last of the original members of KISS to do so � he said the reason for the delay was because for most of his life, he felt that his life, if discussed honestly, didn't warrant a book, and that he hadn't found true happiness until his second marriage, when he was already in his fifties. And though text offers plenty of stories about the rise the triumph of KISS, some of its more interesting passages involve Stanley's often tormented childhood, when an ear deformity brought him ridicule from classmates and from which he received little support from his parents.

�Some people have said that this was a very brave book to write,� said Stanley, a now happy father of four. �I say, 'Well, it only would have been brave if it didn't have a happy ending.' Nobody wants to write from the middle of misery. It felt terrific to write, and it was cathartic. Not to write the book, but to live it. People ask if it was an emotionally taxing project, and I say, 'No, living it was the emotionally taxing project.�

One of the more interesting stories discussed in the book took place in 1999, when Stanley held the starring role of the Toronto production of �Phantom of The Opera.� Though he'd had plastic surgery in the '80s to help correct his ear deformity, he writes that he still felt a strong connection to the play's maimed central character. A woman who'd seen his performance and knew nothing about his own prior condition wrote to him, saying she �had the impression I identified with the character in a way she hadn't seen with other actors.� She then asked him to get involved with AboutFace, an organization that helps children with facial differences cope with their situations. Stunned by her astute observation about him, he reached out to her and got involved with AboutFace.

�It was a huge part of my life,�Stanley said . �It was certainly a transitional and pivotal time. I was going through what was leading up to a divorce, and things were becoming more clear to me, and interestingly, as that was happening, I was finding another side of myself by being able to come in contact with part of myself that I hadn't embraced. And by embracing it, I also got to give to other people through my experiences. There was really a clear sense at that point that giving was the best way to get, and you heal by giving to others.�

Though the release of his book was a joyous time for the man KISS fans still affectionately refer to as �The Starchild,� KISS' induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame was a bit more bumpy. First, KISS had been eligible for induction for 15 years, which was seemed by many rock fans as an absurd snub. Then, when the band finally got the call that they were to be enshrined among rock's elite, the Hall of Fame said only the group's original members would be included, despite the fact the band had sold millions of albums and concert tickets without them. The Hall also wanted the original lineup to perform at the ceremonies, even though they hadn't played together in 14 years. Stanley was vocal about his displeasure with the situation and the entire clique-like induction process, and though he as well as KISS co-founder Gene Simmons and original KISS members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss all showed up for the event and accepted the honor, they did not perform.

Stanley, who remains a bit miffed by the whole thing, says there are still a few other great acts out there for whom induction is long overdue.

�It's such a sham,� he said. �Year after year, you look at the inductees, and most people on the street scratch their heads about half of them. It's really a popularity contest for a very small group of people who actually make the decisions. That Deep Purple isn't in there is absurd. Whether or not I'm a fan of prog-rock, that Yes isn't in is ridiculous.�

Though KISS did a �Farewell Tour� in 2000 with its original members, Stanley and Simmons later decided that KISS should continue and revamped the band with guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer - a lineup which has recorded and toured successfully for more than a decade. Earlier this year, however, Rolling Stone magazine, in a move which many felt was also long overdue, featured KISS on its cover for the very first time, and in that interview, Simmons said he felt he would only tour with the band a few more times. Stanley says he isn't sure how much longer he'll continue to take the stage under the bright KISS logo, but does nothing to dispel the sometimes-hinted-at notion that KISS might actually continue on without he and Simmons.

Is there an officially sanctioned KISS tribute act in the works? Such a band - with handpicked successors, a great stage show, and sent out on the road fully endorsed by Simmons and Stanley - might not be a bad idea. Though �Black Diamond: The Official KISS Show,� for example, might play theaters, not arenas and large amphitheaters, it still might be something fans could enjoy for years to come. In listening to Stanley's words, however, the more likely scenario is that the group will indeed still be called KISS and that expectations will be the same.

�I know KISS won't end,� he said. �The question is, 'How long will I be a part of it, or Gene be a part if it?' I really don't know. As long as we can. It's hard work, but it's incredibly rewarding and fulfilling. In 2000, I thought it was over. It's 14 years later, and I'm much wiser now and smart enough to know that it will continue. Though the band has never been better, I'm also aware that I'm not the only person that can do what I do. I didn't invent what I do. I was influenced by a lot of great singers and performers, and there are people out there that are just chomping at the bit to get up on stage, and I believe there is more than one person that can go up there and blow people away. At some point, I won't be there.�

Currently, Stanley is still there and KISS is in the midst of another successful road jaunt. This time, they've hit the tour trail with co-headliners Def Leppard and the two bands have been drawing huge crowds. Stanley says he's always been a fan of the dynamic English group.

�When I first heard 'Photograph,' it stopped me,� he says. �It was really, really great. And over the years, they've proven themselves by writing just great, great songs. While I'm getting ready to play, I can hear the audience singing all of their songs. And they're great guys. You can't argue with the catalog they've created.�

Stanley is also quite satisfied with the catalog that KISS has created since releasing its first album in 1974. And he appreciates the dedicated KISS Army, which keeps coming back, every tour.

�It's incredible,� he says. �It makes every time I go on stage a victory lap. The race is never over, but it's great to go out there and carry the flag, 40 years later. Bands don't stay the same, and things change, but the integrity and core of what we were is what we are. I couldn't be more proud of the band and I couldn't be more pleased with what we are. Clearly, there is a legend of this band, and I want to make sure that we live up to it. �

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