
Destroyer [Resurrected - Back to Black Edition] |
|||||
|
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Kiss
Engineer: Corky Stasiak; Garth Richardson; Jay Messina... Producer: Bob Ezrin... Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Kiss: Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley (vocals, guitar); Gene Simmons (vocals, bass); Peter Criss (vocals, drums). Recorded at The Record Plant, New York, New York. Includes liner notes by Robert V. Conte. Digitally remastered by Joseph M. Palmaccio at Sterling Sound, New York, New York. Audio Remixers: Justin Cortelyou; Bob Ezrin. Liner Note Author: Bob Ezrin. Recording information: Nimbus School of Recording Arts, Vancouver, B.C.; Record Plant Recording Studios, New York, NY. Photographers: Bob Gruen; Fin Costello; Richard Corkery. Before DESTROYER, Kiss' studio albums were only moderate sellers. But the band's concerts were selling out regularly, and 1975's ALIVE! album had gone gold, putting Kiss on the pop map. DESTROYER, on which they teamed with Alice Cooper producer Bob Ezrin, was the breakthrough that finally got Kiss' grandiose rock ideas down on record. DESTROYER is a chancy, ambitious album. It opens with a radio announcer reporting a teen's death in a car crash, followed by a snippet of "Rock And Roll All Nite" (which had appeared on 1975's DRESSED TO KILL); then the band launches into "Detroit Rock City," an homage to the first city to make them stars. "Great Expectations" features ornate orchestration, a heavenly chorus and a guitar tone that exposes the band's glam-rock ambitions. DESTROYER also includes a ready-made rock anthems ("Shout It Out Loud"), a swipe at manipulative groupies ("Do You Love Me," which is punched up with tubular bells) and a foreboding song about "the lord of the wasteland" that became Gene Simmons' signature tune ("God Of Thunder"). And then there is "Beth," an uncharacteristic ballad, sung and co-written by drummer Peter Criss. The lush strings and delicate piano gave Kiss a Top-10 hit and a greater fan base. Soon would come a TV Movie ("Kiss Meets The Phantom Of The Park") and a comic book.
Q (Magazine) (p.117) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "DESTROYER is still Kiss's best studio album."
Mojo (Publisher) (7/02, p.161) - "...Their magnum opus....So mindless, it's almost Zen."
A theatrical rock band formed in the 1970s heyday of glitter, Kiss brought to life a cast of cartoonish figures sustained by heavy riffs and an endless supply of face paint. With each band member assuming an alter-ego (Gene Simmons, demon; Paul Stanley, stud; Ace Frehley, spaceman; and Peter Criss, cat), Kiss set the standard for the ultimate spectacle, combining monstrously hook-heavy rock with outrageous costumes and stage shows. Following the release of four simultaneous solo albums, Criss left the group, and a few years later Frehley also departed. Simmons and Stanley soldiered on with various lineups, and the group even abandoned their make-up beginning with 1983's LICK IT UP. In 1996, the original quartet reunited and donned their old faces and outfits for a hugely successful tour.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
AC/DC Aerosmith Angel Bad Company Blue Öyster Cult Boston Cheap Trick Faces Faster Pussycat Ford, Lita Foreigner Geordie Great White Hanoi Rocks Heart Insane Clown Posse Invasion, Vinnie Vincent Iron Maiden Jett, Joan Judas Priest King Diamond Manowar Marilyn Manson Misfits (U.S.) Montrose Motörhead Mötley Crüe Nazareth Nirvana (US) Nugent, Ted Osbourne, Ozzy Queen Rainbow Ramones (The) Ratt Roth, David Lee Runaways (The) Rush Scorpions Silverhead Skid Row Slipknot Soundgarden Spinal Tap The Billion Dollar Babies Thin Lizzy Twisted Sister UFO Van Halen W.A.S.P. White Zombie ZZ Top Zolar X Zombie, Rob |
|
||||

R. P.
See more Customer Testimonials
|
Send us your Feedback
|
Feedback Terms