Michael Brandvold
Michael Brandvold
More New items for March 2020. We list new items almost every single day on KISSmuseum.com!
BackstageAxxess
“We were back at the hotel after the show, and people were going back to their rooms, ordering room service and that sort of thing,” he told BackstageAxxess in a recent interview. “Gene Simmons is a real stickler – if he’s in a hotel and he calls down to the front desk or room service or whatever, if it takes more than two or three rings for them to pick up, he really goes ballistic.”
Thayer recalled he was “sitting in [his] room… and the front desk [receptionist] calls and she says, ‘We got a real problem. We just called the SWAT team, the police, to come in, because one of your group has just threatened to blow the hotel up. I was thinking, ‘I think I know who that might be, actually.’ He says that jokingly – ‘You gotta pick up the phone, or I’ll blow this place up’ – that’s a Gene Simmons kind of thing.
“But it kind of got us into trouble, because the police showed up and they thought it was a real bomb threat. I had to assure everybody that it was okay, that this guy … just wanted his cookies and milk after the show.”
Blabbermouth
KISS guitarist Tommy Thayer has confirmed that the band is working on a “definitive” documentary which will include “rare and compelling” KISS-related media submitted by the group’s fans.
“I think we’re at least halfway into it,” Tommy told Niclas Müller-Hansen of Sweden’s RockSverige.se. “The director is John Dorsey and he’s done great things before. We’ve done interviews on camera and he’s putting together a lot of historic footage and talking to a lot of different sources, including us and our archives. It’s coming along. I’ve seen a little bit and I think it will be really exciting and really well done.”
As for the fan-submitted material that will be included in the documentary, Thayer said: “I know some guys that are big collectors and there’s this guy called Mark Cicchini, he’s one of the ‘Three Sides Of The Coin’ [KISS] podcast guys and he’s not only contributed material, but he also pointed John Dorsey in a lot of good directions as far as making contact with a lot of fans. We have a lot of great stuff in our archives for certain, but there’s still a lot of other unique and rare stuff out there that we don’t have. It’s a matter of sourcing that stuff.”
Tommy also talked about the recently announced KISS biopic, which is tentatively due in 2021. KISS manager Doc McGhee previously revealed that producer Mark Canton, who worked on the movie “300”, is involved in the project.
Yahoo
Who: Grammy-winning singer and Oscar-winning actress Cher, 73, and Kiss guitarist and co-lead singer Gene Simmons, 70.
How They Met: Though Cher and Simmons both belonged to the mainstream music scene, they didn’t exactly run in the same circles. Their meeting was a “fluke,” precipitated by both their shared support of former California Governor Jerry Brown and Cher’s son Chaz Bono’s love of Simmons’s band, Kiss. In early 1978, Cher and Simmons both attended a fundraiser for Brown. Chaz, then nine years old, reportedly begged his mom to help him get an autograph from the flamboyant musician.
By ’79, Simmons and Cher were going strong (enough). Cher, who’d been married and divorced twice by this point, called her and Simmons’s time together “the best relationship I’ve ever had with a human being.” But still, this being the ‘70s and all, neither party was monogamous. “Gene might spend time with another woman and stay the night, but he wants her to leave in the morning so he can get on with his day,” Cher told People about her boyfriend’s tour, uh, habits. While she herself admitted to the occasional dalliance “for companionship,” she admitted, “Gene is the one I’m crazy about.”
Why We Loved Them: Despite Simmons’s hardened rockstar exterior, he was actually quite sweet to Cher. He told People the pop icon was his “first love,” calling her “an untainted soul who has never done anything bad to anybody.” He even loved her “wonderful” kids, Chaz and Elijah Allman. “[Chaz] is going to be President of the U.S. someday,” he gushed. “[He] busts me.”
Michael Brandvold
The Tapes Archive
Alex Michael
After the release of their first EP, ”Green River Thriller”, Blue Ruin took the New Zealand market by storm, supporting bands such as Misfits, Steel Panther, Buckcherry and Cheri Currie of The Runaways. Shortly after, the band relocated to Europe to step it up a notch. After two successful headlining tours throughout Europe and the UK, Blue Ruin are beyond excited to announce that they will be embarking on yet another kick ass tour as support for the original Hollywood Vampires, LA Guns, featuring Phil Lewis and Tracii Guns.
Joe
During a recent interview with ‘The Star Tribune,’ David Lee Roth talked about Van Halen’s demo tapes, which were recorded in 1976-1977, in a collaboration with legendary KISS bassist Gene Simmons.
Gene Simmons said that he discovered Van Halen in a club in an interview with Rock Talk With Mitch Lafon in 2017. Today, David Lee has revealed his opinions on Gene Simmons and his producer role.
Here’s what David Lee Roth stated:
“Van Halen was like a sea anemone. It’s born looking exactly the same way it does as it passes into the hereafter.
If you listen to tracks from our club days in 1973, Van Halen, once I joined the band, sounded exactly like we did the first day together at Ed [Van Halen]’s mom’s house as we did on the first record as we did on ‘Jump.’”
He continued:
“It took us five-and-a-half years before Warner Bros finally showed up. About two years before that, Gene came to the Starwood and said: ‘Let’s try to do some demos.’ We flew to Electric Ladyland and made some tapes, but nothing really came out of them. So that was that.”
Click here for the source of the statement.
Michael Brandvold
More New items for February 2020. We list new items almost every single day on KISSmuseum.com!
Michael Brandvold
Joe
Paul Stanley has once again said that he believes KISS can carry on without any original members.
More than a year ago, the legendary rockers launched their second farewell tour, dubbed “End Of The Road”, which is scheduled to end in July 2021. Joining founding members Stanley and Gene Simmons in the band’s current lineup are Tommy Thayer on guitar and Eric Singer on drums. Thayer and Singer are replacements for original members Ace Frehley and Peter Criss, respectively.
Asked by Sioux City Journal whether he thinks KISS could one day exist without him and Simmons, Stanley said: “There was a time when people said, ‘KISS has to be the original four members.’ Well, those people are 50 percent wrong. And all of this is conjecture. I’m not walking away from what Gene and I have built over 45 years. I’m of the mindset that teams don’t fold because their star pitcher or star hitter is gone. There’s an amazing pool of talent out there. Can it continue? Absolutely.”
It was back in 2005 that KISS manager Doc McGhee first told the New York Times that the group had “been toying with the idea of recruiting an entire band to don the band’s famous makeup.” McGhee said: “KISS is more like Doritos or Pepsi, as far as a brand name is concerned. They’re more characters than the individual person. I think [new members] have a legitimate chance to carry the franchise.”
Joe
Michael Brandvold
More New items for February 2020. We list new items almost every single day on KISSmuseum.com!
Kiss‘s ‘End of the Road’ tour is just that for the band’s remaining co-founders, front man Paul Stanley and bassist Gene Simmons.
Fans have been understandably skeptical of Kiss’s current farewell tour after the band’s previous one 20 years ago didn’t stick. Longtime manager Doc McGhee says he’s certain Stanley and Simmons are truly ready to say goodbye at the band’s final show on July 17, 2021 in New York City.
“I doubt things will ever change, but s–t happens all the time,” McGhee told Rock Talk with Mitch Lafon. “But from what we believe, today, this is the end of the road, certainly for Gene and Paul.”
McGhee added — to no one’s surprise — that Kiss, as a brand, isn’t going anywhere. The band plans to maintain its pop culture presence with more Kiss content, like “movies, Broadway shows, whatever? Everybody’s talking about them… As far as a touring base, as far as going out and doing shows, no. There’s not going to be any tours with Gene and Paul. In essence, that’s the end of the road for Gene and Paul for sure.”
Michael Brandvold