Published on Feb 7, 2001
Kiss has never been a band who lived for the album. Instead,
they’ve been — and still are — either a band who live for the
performance (as evidenced by their lengthy “goodbye” tour) or for
the song. There’s nothing inherently wrong with this — though it
can make for the occasional lackluster album.
Kiss, the band’s 1974 debut, is proof of this. There are
some great songs on this album, to be sure; the fact that some of
these still are fan favorites a quarter-century after they first
hit vinyl is proof of that. But Paul Stanley and crew seem to put
their focus on a few songs — and in turn, the whole album
suffers.
Granted, this was a first effort, and as first efforts go, it
really isn’t bad at all. For that matter,
Kiss is not a bad album in the least. I happen to love Kiss,
and still enjoy hearing songs like “Deuce” and “Cold Gin” today,
especially when I need a mental kick in the ass.
Admittedly, maybe the charm of some of these songs is due to the
Alive! factor — namely, the fact that they were featured on
one of the most revered live albums ever. But there is something
special about hearing tracks like “Strutter,” “Firehouse” and
“Black Diamond” almost at the time of their conception, rawer than
you could have imagined in the studio. (That said, I absolutely
hate the stretched-out “slow down” ending of “Black Diamond” —
what a waste.)
So what’s my beef with
Kiss? I can sum it up in three tracks, all of them filler.
The first is “Let Me Know” — is it me, or did Kiss seem to re-work
this one one album later into “Let Me Go, Rock And Roll”? (Save
your flames, I’m not saying it was a direct copy.) Second is
“Kissin’ Time,” which is about Kiss’s equivalent to any rock band
writing a song about being in a rock band. The translation just
doesn’t work. And finally, there’s “Love Theme From Kiss” — what
the hell was
that about? An instrumental breaking up the energy the band
established on “Deuce,” which seems to have no purpose being on
this disc whatsoever.
And that’s where my concerns would start to come in. If a band
relies on filler on their debut album, it’s a sign of trouble
ahead. And let’s be honest, Kiss has had an ear for filler over the
years.
Don’t get me wrong,
Kiss is still very much worth checking out, especially if
you want to get to know the band behind the facepaint and
pyrotechnics on
Alive!. But tread softly on a few areas.