An amazing Vinnie Vincent artifact – Vinnie’s personal studio tapes of various demos from the mid-’80s soon after leaving KISS. These were basically tapes Vinnie would copy from the masters for his personal use away from the studio. What makes these tapes extra-special is that the song titles were hand written by Vinnie himself!
Before being in KISS, Vinnie was a studio musician and then, as he is doing here after leaving KISS, is writing songs to shop around to various artist or record companies. Two of the songs are notable – Tears, was recorded by John Wait in 1984 and went on to become a huge hit. Back on the Streets was recorded later by his band Vinnie Vincent Invasion, but was also recorded for the 1984 movie Voyage of the Rock Aliens and later by John Norum in 1987. It also showed up on unreleased Ace Frehley demos and was rumored to have been recorded by KISS for the Creatures of the Night album, but was dropped from the final cut.
Many of the same song titles appear each on the tapes, but they are all TOTALLY different mixes.
Sound on the tapes is crystal clear, as they were recorded straight from the studio masters.
Auction ends Sunday evening.
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Monthly Archives: May 2014
Paul Stanley photo from Scarlet Page’s Resonators collection
Chris Stern
Recently at a charity auction I bought this signed Paul Stanley photo from Scarlet Page’s Resonators collection.
The Resonators are the guitarists who created the sound we call rock, this epic collection revealing 29 portraits
features a host of names and faces including Sir Paul McCartney, Jimmy Page, Brian May, Slash, Jeff Beck, Joe Walsh and Paul Stanley.
Scarlet Page, daughter of Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, A photographer for more than 20 years,
Page has turned her lens on these guitar heroes for Teenage Cancer Trust.
With an exebition at The Royal Albert Hall in London and an charity auction on Ebay.
With all the profits going to the Teenage Cancer Trust.
Teenage Cancer Trust is a charity dedicated to improving the quality of life and chances of survival for the six young people aged between 13 and 24 diagnosed with cancer every day.
The charity builds specialist units within NHS hospitals that bring young people together to be treated by teenage cancer experts in a place designed just for them.
A declaration of KISS dependance
William Michael Redman
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Preamble
“You wanted the best, you got the best! The hottest band in the world …
What a great time to be a KISS fan! 2014 marks 40 years since their debut album, and tickets for the summer tour with Def Leppard have just gone on sale.
April 2014 in particular is notable due to a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, where the four original members will be honored. In the same week, Paul Stanley’s long-awaited autobiography will be on the shelves, completing the quartet of published life stories told by each of the original members of KISS.
And on a completely different note, the professional arena football team, The LA KISS, have made their debut this year.
I’ve been a KISS fan most of my life, and I’ve decided to take this month of April 2014 — which I am declaring as KISS Month — to write down some things: what songs I like, what album covers appeal to me most, and what each band member has meant to me.
I’m also going to present a series of writings which will try to explain why I have such a fascination with the band and the brand. I’ve titled this series: Unmasking the Masks of KISS.
My hope is that my musings here are as interesting and entertaining as KISS is to me. It wasn’t always easy being a diehard fan of this group, but I feel proud to have backed a band which has finally beaten down their detractors and is getting the recognition that they deserve of being one of the most important rock bands of all time.
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The Unmasking of the Masks of KISS, Part One of Five
First Smack to the Head
I received my first rock music album in 1980 when I was 9 years old. It was a birthday present from my best friend, who had himself been given the exact same gift fifteen days before on his 9th birthday. The album was KISS Alive II, released in October of 1977 over two years prior, which accounted for the sliced off lower left corner indicative of its rescue from a cut-out bin. My pal had fallen under a spell of KISS fever in those two weeks between our birthdays, and he most graciously went to Camelot Music or Musicland at the mall and searched out another copy to present to me as a gift.
Three Sides of the Coin episode 74 – Paul Stanley’s book Q&A in San Francisco
Michael Brandvold
Paul Stanley interview at the JCCSF of San Francisco
Aidin Vazari | JCCSF
One on One with Mitch Lafon, episode 8 – Carnival of Souls producer Toby Wright
Mitch Lafon
Producer Toby Wright sits down One On One with Mitch Lafon (rock journalist) to discuss his work on the KISS album ‘that fell through the cracks’ – CARNIVAL OF SOULS. As Toby walks the listener through the minutiae of that late ’90s album, he also talks about working with Alice In Chains and Metallica. Toby had engineering duties on Metallica’s …And Justice For All album and explains what exactly happened to the much talked about (and often maligned) “bass sound.”
New Jersey KISS Mart this Saturday, May 10
Podcast Rock City – KISS 2.0?
Podcast Rock City
Paul Stanley on The Talk
The Talk
Gene Simmons of Kiss & Shannon Tweed of Family Jewel’s on Barrett-Jackson Online
The Drive with Alan Taylor
Paul Stanley Talks LA Kiss
The New Music Buzz
Ace Frehley on the Artie Lange show
Artie Lange
Not sure how we missed this one from a few weeks ago, but here it is!
KISS’ Ace Frehley: What Really Happened at Rock Hall Induction
Loudwire