A Half Century of KISStory is Celebrated—Loudly—in New Book

KISS made literal Rock Star Superheroes. Their 1976 “Destroyer” record remains their best seller. Record cover detail/Art by Ken Kelly.

If you’ve got a KISS fan on your upcoming gift list and don’t know what to possibly get for he or she (though it’s probably a he…), fear no more! Your shopping stress just got a little easier with the arrival of the fine and fantastic new glossy tome KISS at 50 by Martin Popoff (192 pp., $40, Motorbooks/Quarto Publishing).

Popoff is perhaps music journalism’s most prolific scribe, with approximately 115 books and nearly 8,000 record reviews to his credit. Though as he says upfront, this subject is particularly close to him as fan since the two bands he most cherishes are KISS and his fellow Canadian countrymen in Rush.

Taking a track from some of his previous work, instead of a straight biography (of which there are several already), Popoff instead choose 50 different events, albums, or important points in the band’s career to tell their story since their founding in 1973. And gets into the nitty gritty detail that a card-carrying member of the KISS Army can appreciate.

As in when he offers that Michael Doret, when he designed the cover for the Rock and Roll Over album, had already birthed from his mind the official logo for the New York Knicks. Or that the actor who overdubbed all of drummer Peter Criss’ unintelligible (or not recorded) dialogue lines for the now-punchline TV movie KISS Meet the Phantom of the Park was by Michael Bell, who would later lend his voiceover talents to The Smurfs cartoon.

The story is evenly told across time, with attention even given to the years that KISS was creatively afloat and out of contemporary pop culture (this includes their forays into hair metal, soppy balladry, “grunge” and—gasp!—disco.

And what makes Popoff’s writing a bit refreshingly different here is that he seems to give voice to common opinions of fans about both the high and low points of KISStory.

Popoff covers pretty much everything here, with two nitpicky omissions. He could have devoted one of his sidebar chapters to books written by and about KISS, as well as a look at the merchandising from the most-merchandised band in history. After all, there were not only dolls and lunch boxes and games and makeup kits for the original childhood fans, but later KISS condoms and deodorant. And, infamously, the KISS Kasket (which Pantera’s murdered guitarist Dimebag Darrell was laid to rest in, reportedly as a gift from the group).

As usual with Popoff’s coffee table books, this one is visually stunning with more than 300 color images. There’s plenty of posed and live shots of the band over the decades, but the fun stuff is in the ephemera: posters, advertisements, rare album and single covers, backstage passes, buttons and even patches.

And while the original foursome of Paul, Gene, Ace and Peter get the most attention (including the latter two’s in-and-outs of the lineup), other members of the family get ink as well.

Like a lot of other rock bands, the previously-announced KISS “farewell” or last tours have proven to be premature. But their current “End of the Road” world tour—begun in 2019—recently brought the party to a stop in New York City, the band’s birthplace. Most fans think this one will actually stick to that promise. Especially since at the end of the show as the flesh-and-blood KISS left the stage, they immediately introduced…Animated Avatar KISS. Who can tour forever and don’t need per diem.

The article originally appeared at HoustonPress.com

About Bob Ruggiero

I am a passionate fan of classic rock (and related music) with 35 years experience writing about it for daily/weekly newspapers and magazines. I am also the author of the interview anthology "The Classic Rock Bob Reader" and "Slippin' Out of Darkness: The Story of WAR." Both available on Amazon!
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