With
that statement on February 28, 1996, Tupac Shakur introduced
the original Kiss lineup (in full makeup and Love
Gun-era stage outfits), to a rousing ovation at the 38th Annual Grammy Awards. On
April 16, the band held a press conference aboard the USS Intrepid (CV-11) in New York, where they announced
their plans for a full-fledged reunion tour, with the help of new manager Doc McGhee. The conference, emceed by Conan O'Brien, was simulcast to 58 countries. On April 20,
nearly 40,000 tickets for the tour's first show sold out in 47 minutes.
The
first public concert featuring the newly reunited Kiss was an hour-long warm up
show on June 15 for the annual KROQ Weenie Roast in Irvine, California, during which the band
nearly ignited the stage of the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater. On
June 28, the Kiss Alive/Worldwide Tour began at Tiger Stadium in Detroit, Michigan in
front of a sold-out crowd of 39,867 fans. The tour lasted for 192 shows over 11
months and earned $43.6 million, making Kiss the top-drawing concert act
of 1996. The
average attendance of 13,737 is the highest in the group's history.
In
September 1998, the reunited group issued Psycho Circus. Despite their appearance as the first album
with the original lineup since 1980s Unmasked (even though Criss didn't play on the
album), the contributions of Frehley and Criss were minimal. While the images
of Frehley and Criss are featured prominently on the album, most of the lead
guitar work was later revealed to have been performed by future band member Tommy Thayer and
former member Bruce Kulick. Most drum duties were handled by session musician
Kevin Valentine. Despite the controversy, the album achieved a number 3 chart
debut, the highest position for a Kiss album until Sonic Boom debuted at number two in 2009. The title track received a Grammy nomination for Best
Hard Rock Performance. The Psycho Circus Tour opened at Dodger Stadium in
Los Angeles, California on Halloween night 1998, and was simulcast on FM
radio across the U.S. It proved to be another success, and was historic for
being the first to ever incorporate 3-D visuals into a stage show.
On
August 11, 1999, Kiss was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame, in the
"Recording Industry" category. August 13 saw the nationwide premiere
of a Kiss-themed motion picture, titled Detroit Rock
City. The film takes place in 1978, and focuses on four
teenagers (featuring Edward Furlong) willing to do anything to score tickets for a
sold-out Kiss show in Detroit.
The
next month, the group worked in collaboration with World
Championship Wrestling to
produce a Kiss-themed wrestler known as The Demon whose
face was painted to resemble Simmons. The group performed God of Thunder live on WCW Monday Nitro to
debut the character. The band got $500,000 for the one-night, one-song
performance. The character was short-lived, as all
ties to Kiss were cut by WCW when its head, Eric Bischoff was
relieved of his duties in September of that year.
Kiss
announced in early 2000 that they would be launching a U.S. Farewell Tour in the summer, which was to be the band's
last, although it was last for the original line up; the tour kicked off on
March 12, 2000. The
group quickly added dates to the tour, which ran through April 2001. 2000 also
saw the release of a computer game, Kiss: Psycho
Circus: The Nightmare Child, based on the comic book series Kiss: Psycho Circus from Todd McFarlane Productions.
[edit]Post-reunion (2001–08)
On
the eve of the Japanese and Australian leg of the Farewell Tour on January 31,
2001, Criss suddenly left the band once again, due to the fact that he and the
band could not come to agreement with his contract salary. Taking his place was
previous Kiss drummer Eric Singer who,
in a move that was controversial among longtime fans, assumed Criss's Cat Man
persona as the Farewell Tour continued.
With
the band scheduled to call it a day supposedly by early 2001, a
career-encompassing collection entitled The Box Set (94 tracks on five CDs) was released
in November of that year, while the summer saw perhaps the most outrageous item
of Kiss merchandise yet – the Kiss Kasket. In introducing the Kiss Kasket, Simmons quipped,
"I love livin', but this makes the alternative look pretty damn good.
On
December 4, 2001, Kiss was one of the honorees at the National Academy of
Recording Arts and Sciences ("The Recording Academy") Heroes Award
ceremony, at the NARAS New York Chapter. NARAS has 12 chapters throughout the
United States, hence 12 ceremonies throughout the year, with the honorees each
being honored by the chapter closest to their residence. By receiving this
honor, which NARAS has renamed the "Recording Academy Honors," Kiss
effectively received NARAS' second-highest career honor, right behind the
Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award.
Kiss
was relatively quiet through the rest of the year, but 2002 started with some
controversy as Simmons took part in a controversial interview on National Public Radio with host Terry Gross. In
February 2002, Kiss (with Singer on drums and Frehley on lead guitar) performed
during the Closing Ceremonies of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. This was Frehley's
final performance with Kiss.
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiss_(band)
http://www.bravewords.com/news/157923
http://www.rocktownhall.com/blogs/index.php/kiss-army-reunion-band-of-brothers/
http://www.bravewords.com/news/157923
http://www.rocktownhall.com/blogs/index.php/kiss-army-reunion-band-of-brothers/
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