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Still Rockin' In Detroit

Posted on Monday September 28, 2009 at 05:01 PM 7 |

Our pal and photographer John Davisson is a huge Kiss fan. So much so that he flew from his home in Florida to Detroit last week, joining fellow Pollstar photog Scott Legato to witness the band launch their Alive 35 tour. Since none of us could get the time off from our six jobs to be there, we asked him to give us (and you) a fan’s-eye view of things.

I grew up with Kiss in the late ’70s. I got my cerebral rock from Rush, my bluesy roots rock from Aerosmith, my operatic rock from Queen and my aggression from Ted Nugent. But it was Kiss when I wanted to “rock and roll all night and party every day.” Like a lot of teenagers, I had posters of my favorite bands plastered all over my walls. Kiss dominated them all. Partly because they had the best posters (and the most). Their Alive II tour was one of my first concerts.

  • Kiss Alive 35

    Fans are packed in to the rafters at Detroit's Cobo Arena for the kick off of Kiss' 35th anniversary tour.
    September 25, 2009

    (Scott Legato)

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I used to read the magazines about Kiss to learn my Kisstory and today I still know their real names, their vices and motivators. On the Dynasty tour, I was able to sneak in a camera (anybody remember 110 Instamatic cameras, the camera-phone of the day?). That lead to a passion for photographing concerts which grew from that Instamatic to 35mm and eventually to digital photography. Now I’m a respected senior music photographer with photos published in many outlets. Thanks guys!

So it was with great zeal that I headed to Detroit to see Kiss open their US tour with a two-night stand at Cobo Arena, the venue that helped propel them into the arena rock realm after they recorded the first Alive album there in the 70’s. Cobo Arena, now one of the older arenas in the country, is about to be retired so the band felt it best to pay their last respects to the place that was so much a part of the Kiss success story.

  • KISS

    Gene Simmons and Tommy Thayer.
    September 25, 2009

    (Scott Legato)

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The guys invited some fans to the venue the night before the first show for a meet and greet, a brief dress rehearsal, to watch the recording of a few songs for “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” and to watch them film some scenes for “Modern Day Delilah,” the first video from their upcoming album Sonic Boom (out Oct. 6).

Kiss’ Alive 35 tour is a celebration of three-and-a-half decades of Kisstory and a tribute to Alive. So the band kicked off the first night by playing the album, almost in its entirety and pretty close to the original running order. For some reason, they dropped “Firehouse” and “Rock Bottom.”

Ace Frehley and Peter Criss are no longer touring with Kiss, replaced by Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer respectively. Hearing classics like “She,” “Deuce,” “Strutter,” “Got to Choose,” and “Parasite” was still a real treat though. Gene Simmons breathed fire during “Hotter Than Hell” and there was some nice pyro throughout, especially during “100,000 Years” and “Rock and Roll All Nite.” Tommy Thayer had a guitar solo that featured fireworks shooting from his guitar, just like Ace’s used to. Eric Singer’s drum kit elevated and revolved during his drum solo.

  • KISS

    Paul Stanley
    September 25, 2009

    (Scott Legato)

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The show ended with a long encore that brought the Kisstory into the present with “Shout It Out Loud,” “Lick It Up,” “I Love It Loud” (during which Gene spit blood and flew up to the lighting rig) and “Modern Day Delilah.” Then Paul Stanley stepped onto a winch that carried him over the audience to a revolving second stage at the back of the hall for “Love Gun.” The final song of the night was a final thank you to the city – a pyro-heavy “Detroit Rock City.”

The stage and costumes might have been a little different but it was still the spectacle I know and love from Kiss, with enough confetti to completely cover the floor by the end of the show. Kiss is still very much alive 35 years after they started. And that makes this fan, and the legion of fans that make up the Kiss Army, very happy.


7 Comments leave a comment RSS

  1. 257
    RATTUSNORVEGICUS wrote:

    09:40 PM, Sep 28, 2009

    I saw them on the Kiss Alive 2 tour also with Piper opening for them in the late '70's but whereas that was a bang for your buck this tour is'nt what Gene claimed recently.It is'nt a bang for the buck for the fans at all.They are playing arenas and about 1/2 of the place has tickets for over $125! What a farce.I sure would'nt waste my money.I can get the tour dvd from Netflix for next to nothing so why do they think I'd pay so much?Sitting in nose-bleed seats for too much money is also a joke.I have better things to do.The new cd/dvd package is the only bang for your buck for those who have'nt given up on these post-middle age geezers.

  2. 1
    AlwaysRIGHT wrote:

    05:27 PM, Sep 29, 2009

    Love your opening paragraph - couldn't agree with you more.  Rush, Nugent, Aerosmith, Kiss, Def Leppard.  How 'bout Satriani though?  Or Southern Rock - Lynyrd Skynyd, Molly Hatchet, 38 Special.  And when I want to mellow out... Sara Mclaughlin, Aimee Mann, even some Enya.  And admittedly, I sort of like Avril Lavigne (her two CDs were really good, last one had a handful of good songs).  I'm not a huge Kiss fan, but I have seen them and I like seeing them, like reading about them, have a dozen or so of their songs in my iTunes/iPod.  And they rock.  Was really into them back when they were huge.  Still like the material from Alive and Alive 2.  I just think they're cool band.  Oh, and for Christmas music, how 'bout TSO?  OMG!  They'll blow you away!

  3. 5
    Jamin' wrote:

    05:53 PM, Sep 29, 2009

    Nice article John,

    I want your job.  I grew up with KISS and could have probably bought a house with all the KISS stuff I bought throughout the yrs. My favorite Poster was .1 Spirit of '76,   I think everyone should see a KISS show at least once if they can.

     With Concerts costing so much, at least you will get a bang for your buck! I love the Pyro, Big screens and the sing alongs!

    KISS Alive... will be a classic forever! I would like to hear from the people in the audience that are on those album photo's or at that concert.

  4. 114
    Emerson Biggens wrote:

    07:53 AM, Sep 30, 2009

    I was at the Saturday night Detroit show, and though Kiss have retired the blinding flash pods for popping fireworks, it is still a show that everyone should see at least once. Gene and Paul were pretty energetic for AARP candidates.

  5. 2
    concertvetnpoor wrote:

    07:23 AM, Oct 01, 2009

    If it ain't the original four, it ain't Kiss . . . just a modern-day money-grab by the firm of Simmons, Stanley and two junior partners before the firm is dissolved . . . yeah, "you wanted the best . . . " . . . not even close!

  6. 6
    Funky D wrote:

    12:28 PM, Oct 02, 2009

    so where  are the pictures?

  7. 112
    sugar wrote:

    01:50 PM, Oct 12, 2009

    I was at the first night in Cobo. Flew up for Memphis. My 34th KISS concert and paid top money for 20th row. It was a good show, but what band is worth seeing at $150 a pop these days.  Even KISS in their prime (1975) should not cost that much. Stanley's voice was pretty rough, but the band played well, especially for an opening night of a tour where many bands are trying to get their settings.  Anyway, if you have never seen KISS, they DO have $20 seats available for this tour and it is a rock n roll party, so crack open some Cold Gin and strut yer way to a pretty good show. KISS still rock....8 inches above ground.

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