Bruce Kulick featured in Blue Ruin’s version of Turn on the Night

Alex

Attention !! Special Video Message from Bruce Kulick

KISS Legend Bruce Kulick played lead guitars on the new version of the KISS Classic “Turn on the night” by Blue Ruin which will be released next week thru iTunes, Spotify and all other digital platforms on their debut EP “Green River Thriller”. CD’s will be available worldwide thru RSR Music / Cargo Records on Amazon and many other selected stores

produced by Alexx Michael & Anna Monteith

Ace Frehley says he would join KISS farewell tour ‘for the right price’

Lyndsey Parker | Yahoo Entertainment

Casual KISS fans might be surprised to learn that Gene Simmons co-wrote two tracks on former KISS guitarist Ace Frehley’s new solo album, Spaceman (“Without You I’m Nothing” and “Your Wish Is My Command,” the latter of which also features Simmons’s bass playing), or that Simmons even gave the album its title. After all, Frehley’s squabbles with both Simmons and KISS’s other mainstay, Paul Stanley, have been well-documented over the years.

But Frehley tells Yahoo Entertainment that there’s “no bad blood” between him and his ex-bandmates — he recently performed with Simmons in Australia and as part of Simmons’s Vault Experience, and Stanley appeared on Frehley’s 2016 albumOrigins Volume 1 — and this of course raises the question, will Frehley, who successfully reunited with Simmons, Stanley, and original drummer Peter Criss in 1996, take part in KISS’s just-announced big farewell tour?

“I knew you were gonna ask that,” Frehley chuckles. There’s a glint in his eye that suggests he’s not telling the whole story (at one point he asks exactly when this interview will run) but is revealing all he can offer right now. “OK, I have a pat answer, and it’s true: I haven’t been invited.” That doesn’t mean Frehley isn’t open to the idea, however. “For the right price,” he says, he would “absolutely” do it.

“The first year of that reunion tour, we grossed $215 million, and that was 20 years ago. So what would it be today, probably double that? Half a billion? I’m there,” he laughs.

As for whether Criss would also sign on, Frehley says he hasn’t talked to his old bandmate lately. “Most of the time when I want to talk to Peter, I have to talk to his wife. She’s like his manager, Gigi. She’s a nice lady, but I don’t even think Peter has his own cellphone, or if he does, I don’t have the number,” he shrugs. “When I do business with Paul and Gene, I call Paul and he picks up. He goes, ‘Ace Frehley, how you doing?’ Gene says the same thing. When I want to talk to Peter, or ask him a question, it’s Gigi I go through.” Frehley adds, “For the right price, I’m sure he’d do it. I mean, it’s tough to turn down a couple of million dollars.”

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ACE FREHLEY On KISS TV Movie ‘Phantom Of The Park’: PAUL STANLEY And GENE SIMMONS Expected ‘Gone With The Wind’

Blabbermouth

During a “live conversation” at Hollywood’s Musicians Institute on September 25, former KISS guitarist Ace Frehley recalled filming the band’s 1978 Hanna Barbera-produced made-for-television movie “Kiss Meets The Phantom Of The Park” (alternately known as “Attack Of The Phantoms”).

“I remember it very well,” Frehley said.”I had a lot of fun. When we started shooting at [the Los Angeles-area amusement park] Magic Mountain, they closed the park at 6 o’clock, so I had the run of the park. I bought a moped and used to drive around all those asphalt trails between the rides. I crashed a few times, but luckily, I had that costume on with all the padding, and I didn’t get hurt.

“The whole experience for me was pretty good,” Frehley continued, “[but] there was one day that I really kind of lost it, and that was when I had a fight with a producer. What happened was, I was partying the night before, we had to get up at 7 o’clock [and] drive to Magic Mountain. Then we had to put our makeup on and costumes and stuff. I had the day’s shooting schedule, and I was supposed to start shooting at around 10:30, 11 o’clock. All of a sudden, somebody knocks on the door and they says, ‘Excuse me, Mr. Frehley. We’re going to be doing close-ups on Gene Simmons all morning, and we won’t need you until after lunch.’ That happened more than once, but the second time it happened, I just lost my [tempter]. I ran into the producer’s office [and said], ‘This shit’s not going to fly with me. You get your shit together. If you want me here at 9 o’clock in makeup, you better make sure you got your shooting schedule right,’ because nobody wants to sit around in that makeup and costume for 12 hours. I lost it — I jumped into my Mercedes and took off.”

Although his former bandmates have voiced their displeasure with the movie, Frehley doesn’t share their opinion. “Paul [Stanley] and Gene have gone on record that they hate the film,” he said. “I think it’s hysterical, and I think it’s campy and I think it’s a silly rock ‘n’ roll movie. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with it. They took the film so goddamn seriously that it just ruined it for them when they saw the final cut, because they expected ‘Gone With The Wind’.”

“Kiss Meets The Phantom Of The Park” originally aired on the American television network NBC on October 28, 1978. Filmed largely on location at the Magic Mountain theme park in Santa Clarita, California, the film finds the members of KISS — playing themselves — using their “superpowers” to battle an evil inventor.

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