Kiss News
KISS Sighting: Game Show Network
Game Show Network's America Says question - Greatest rock bands of all-time. SO COOL!
Thanks for sharing the clip with us, Anthony Cooper.
Staying busy with KISS!
KISS fan Ron Ivanjack completed this one over the weekend!
What's been keeping you busy this weekend, KISSARMY? Tell us on the Letters page.
Latest KISS magazine cover: Rock 'n' Roll Magazine Sweden
KISS IS EVERYWHERE!
Thanks to Niklas Olsson for sharing with us!
KISS Sighting: Ad for Wax Museum in Mexico City.
Behind the scenes on the End Of The Road: Backstage at the Staples Center Los Angeles
Chris Jericho Forms ’80s KISS Cover Band Kuarantine
By Daniel Kohn / Spin.com
Chris Jericho was sitting at home in quarantine on April 11th like everyone else. He couldn’t wrestle (he’s one of AEW’s biggest attractions), and his band Fozzy wasn’t touring either. Then his pal Kent Slucher — Luke Bryan’s drummer — sent him a text with a drum part, and from there, things came together really quickly.
“I said it sounds like KISS’ ‘No No No,'” Jericho told SPIN over the phone. “I asked him what he was doing and he said, ‘I’m just laying down some fun tracks with a friend of mine and we’re going to do a cover of the song.’ I asked him if they needed a singer and he said, ‘Absolutely.’
And that’s how it started. Calling themselves Kuarantine (get it?), Jericho and Slucher enlisted guitarist Joe McGinness and PJ Farley from hard rock band Trixter to fill out the lineup. Unlike other KISS tribute bands, Kuarantine focuses solely on ’80s KISS, which Jericho says is his favorite KISS era (“Everyone likes to bag on me because of it”).
Flash Black Friday: She from Rock The Nation Tour
You wanted the best, you got the best: How KISS came Alive!
By Paul Elliott (Classic Rock)
As KISS as they broke out of the clubs of New York City in 1974, it would be a long, hard slog before the rest of America paid attention
In November 1973, as Kiss began work on their debut album at Bell Sound studio in New York City, it was the band’s sheer will to win that left the biggest impression on the two guys who co-produced that album, Kenny Kerner and Richie Wise.
As the latter recalled: “The desire to be huge, the desire to hit the grand slam right out of the box, was the foundation that Kiss was built on. Nothing was going to stop them from becoming the biggest band in the world. They wanted to make rock’n’roll history.”
It was a dream that became a reality, but not without a long, hard struggle. For all the hype that the band generated with their larger than life image, and all the popularity they gained as an outrageous, take-no-prisoners live act, there was a period, the best part of two years, when they couldn’t buy a hit record.
KISS ARMY ROCKS!
Thanks to Calle Englund for sharing this great Paul Stanley Starchild tattoo with us!
KISS ARMY! We love seeing your tattoos, artwork, and KISS kids / family photos! Send them to us at KISSOnline.com/letters!