KISS, in 1982, were very much in danger of slipping into musical obscurity in the same way Aerosmith were at the time. Unlike, Aerosmith, it wasn't drugs that were causing the slide, it was KISS themselves. When I visited their album "Unmasked," I pointed out that they seemed to be abandoning the hard rock sound that made them a household name, for good or ill, back in the 1970s. "Unmasked" was a deliberate lurch to more commercial sounds that was feared to have started when they released a disco tune on the "Dynasty" album and continued onto the 1981 "Music From the Elder" album, although the latter was an improvement on the predecessor. By 1982, people like me were starting to forget them. My biggest memory of them that year was the night before my battalion was starting its combat readiness evaluation. My company gunnery sergeant told us that when we applied the camouflage make up the next day, that we were not to make ourselves up to look like KISS.
[caption id="attachment_2788" align="aligncenter" width="288"] Definitely not like KISS[/caption]What KISS needed was to go back to their heavy roots. One night, at my favourite rock bar on Okinawa, a video came on that made personal history. It was for the song "I Love it Loud" and from first strike of the guitar string, it was clear that KISS had gone back to what made them great. "I Love it Loud" is a complete rock out and since that fateful evening, it has been my all time favourite KISS song. I think the band knew that too because it would be another three years before I would finally get to see them live and they played that song for me. Even to this day, hearing that song makes me want to jump out of my seat.
Insert tired cliche here but one song does not make a good album and there are plenty of other great rockers on "Creatures of the Night." In fact, there it is extremely difficult to pick one that isn't. Even the power ballad "I Still Love You" rocks and rocks hard. Maybe back then, I should have played that one as opposed to "Beth" in my attempts to woo the ladies. While I can't fault any track on the album, the ones that really do it most for me, apart from my all time fave, are "Rock and Roll Hell," the title track," "Killer," "Saints and Sinners" and "War Machine" is the perfect closer to this album. It's also the track for me where Vinnie Vincent comes into his own as a lead guitarist. What I said back then I reiterate now. When I heard "Creatures of the Night," I concluded that KISS were truly back.
Track Listing:
1. Creatures of the Night
2. Saints and Sinners
3. Keep Me Coming
4. Rock and Roll Hell
5. Danger
6. I Love it Loud
7. I Still Love You
8. Killer
9. War Machine
[caption id="attachment_2338" align="aligncenter" width="316"] KISS[/caption]Paul Stanley- rhythm guitar, vocals
Gene Simmons- bass, vocals
Eric Carr- drums, backing vocals
Ace Frehley- lead guitar
Vinnie Vincent- lead guitar on tracks 2, 3, 5, 6, 8 and 9
Sometime during the recording of "Creatures of the Night," lead guitarist Ace Frehley would be out and new guitarist Vinnie Vincent would be in. Thus the course of metal history would be changed in the KISS camp. Notice, I said metal here. That is because I believe that this album would be the first KISS album that I would truly call heavy metal.
Next post: A Tragic Loss for Metal
To buy Rock And Roll Children, email me at: tobychainsaw@hotmail.com
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