I’m not really a true fan of KISS, I just grew up as a teen with them bursting onto the scene and they were just there. Obviously noticeable because who didn’t want to know what was behind the makeup, and I always was kind of fascinated with the Starchild looks and moves. I couldn’t really be a true KISS fan as I don’t like heavy metal music, but as with a lot of those types of bands, they do put out music that is more widely liked than just that genre. I have always loved Hard Luck Woman and I remember I Was Made for Loving You was, along with My Sharona, one of the two biggest songs of the year in Australia in 1979. I still bop along to IWMFLY if I hear it. There are a few other songs, in the 90s, which I liked also. And, looking back, they were ground breaking. I remember when there was the big unmasking in the 80s and thinking, yeah, I knew this guy, Starchild, had some looks behind that mask, and Gene, yep, he’s no girl’s dream that’s for sure, about what I expected! If you look at any of the song videos in the 80s unmasked he totally cracks me up, he looks so out of place, but still enjoying himself, it's actually really quite funny! I went to a lot of concerts in the late 70s/80s, but I regret I didn’t get to experience them, I know I would have loved the spectacle of it.
I happened upon Kisstory Part 1 on TV the other day with Paul and Gene and thought, oh, this will be interesting. It was. I loved it. Had to track down Part 2. It’s always interesting to find out what was going on behind the scenes, what made them successful and how they’ve all fared through time. I tend to shy away from autobiographies because I quite often end up not liking someone I’ve liked for years and years. Anyway, once I’d seen the TV documentary, I wanted a bit more, so I found this book and read it … really quickly. I have “read” quite a few autobiographies and I usually skip huge portions of them as just uninteresting, but this one I read the whole lot from start to end. I suspect in real life I would quite like him - now. He is a bit arrogant, the sort of arrogance a lot of successful Americans have, but, hey, he is regarded as one of the best frontmen of all time, one of the most successful in his field, so it’s hardly surprising. He was quite self-depricating as well. He admitted his mistakes and learned from them. He understands he isn’t perfect, he owns that. I like his outlook on life and he is a bit on the snarky side and made me laugh out loud quite a few times. He really does hit the nail on the head. I read a few of the reviews for this book afterwards and some complain he and Gene are business all the way around the Ace and Peter issues … well, hello, this is how they made their living, it IS a business and Peter and Ace didn’t cut it on any level. Not only that, KISS is Stanley's life’s work, he was the one who started it, held it together through the years, and obviously it’s his life’s calling. He LOVES Kiss, he protects it and he worked HARD at being successful.
I was thinking to read the other biographies, but I have decided not to. Gene isn’t someone who interests me in the slightest, I don’t see the point of reading Ace’s account as he was drunk/drugged out pretty much for most of it and probably made up most of his and Peter, well, after reading this and then the reviews on his book, that bloke seems to have an Antisocial Personality Disorder, and it sounds like his book is a venge-fest, so not interested. I’m not interested in whiney people who blame everyone else for their own poor decisions. I was not happy he apparently kept implying or stating Stanley is gay or bi. I couldn’t care less if he was, but Stanley himself has stated plainly in his book he isn’t, so that’s an end to that. I mention this purely as it’s a pretty gross thing to do and I can’t respect Criss for it as I don’t believe in outing people, it’s up to them to say, if they want to, if they are gay. I can totally understand the contempt Stanley holds for Criss, it must have been a trial living through it. I can well imagine a concert of that magnitude many things can go wrong, but having to worry about whether half the band was even going to perform must have been incredibly stressful. For my part, I’m glad, if there was hinky sex stuff, which apparently Criss implies, Stanley didn’t write about it, I certainly don’t want to know what goes down in detail in the bedroom, especially since there was obviously so much of it, thousands of women it would seem, so I can well imagine it wasn't vanilla. Yeah, I really don't want to know!
I appreciated that Stanley really wanted it to work with Ace and Peter, all together they were KISS and had magic, he understood that, understood Criss and Ace were part of the original magic and success, but in the end they weren’t cut out for it. They had to go for survival of the band. It seemed to me that if Stanley hadn’t been the driving force, KISS would have died the first time in the early 80s, if they even got that far, never to be heard from again. It must have been incredibly frustrating for him to work so hard for success to sit by and watch these two try to wreck it, inadvertely by Ace and deliberately on Criss’s part. Fancy just stopping playing right in the middle of a concert, what a fucker! I know people are sympathetic to Criss and Frehley, but I’m not one of them. I totally understand the Stanley perspective. I have my own business and am proud of what I’ve achieved, I don’t have employees, but I work with others and sometimes it can be very frustrating when they don’t do the right thing or don’t pull their weight. I like to give people chances too, but I will jettison people in the end if they don’t perform. It’s business, it’s survival, you don’t want to be sucked down by them. Those two even got a second chance, and they squandered that as well, so that’s on them. Ace was better off out, he obviously couldn’t cope with it and didn’t want to put the work in.
I really enjoyed the story and I enjoyed the way it was written. It is a fascinating look back to a different time that I loved and, holy cow, surviving for over 50 years in that crazy business shows they had the goods, and Stanley seems to have been the one to keep that going. To be honest, if someone had have asked me a week ago I would have thought KISS had broken up years ago so it was with surprise I realised they are still touring and, in fact, coming for one last time to Australia in a few months!
This was an enjoyable read, I couldn’t put it down. I haven’t read many rock star books - to be honest, I don’t really like those type of people generally, the way of life is totally foreign to me, not being interested in groupies, drugs, alcohol and wholesale sex, but after seeing Kisstory and reading this, Stanley didn’t come across as the usual arsehole rock star, he worked hard and didn’t do drugs and alcohol (that’s a surprise, isn’t it!) and I was interested to know more. I was pretty relieved I came out of reading it still liking him, probably more than I did before actually, which was really nice. I am now going to check out a bit more of their music in the later years. I’m really glad I read this.