Summary
Casablanca
Release date: October 14, 1977
User Review
( votes)‘Don’t judge a book by its cover,” goes the adage. The cover of this second live installment from U.S.A. rockers, Kiss, features a blood-splattered, sweat-soaked Gene Simmons … quite striking indeed. However, on opening up the lavish gatefold sleeve, a veritable feast of flamethrowers, fireworks, flamethrowers, and hydraulic ramps welcomes you and, errrrr … even more flamethrowers.
Once described as a nuclear explosion in a waxworks factory, Kiss have succeeded in producing one of the most spectacular covers for a live album ever witnessed. If this doesn’t make you want to quit your day job and become a rock star, then nothing will.
So, the cover is great, but what about the music???
Commencing with the traditional Kiss battle cry, and straight into the opening salvo of “Detroit Rock City” and “King of the Night Time World,” a battery of explosions leaves you with no doubt that this will be an audio riot. The pace hardly lets up throughout the whole album, with each song coming across harder, faster, and vastly superior to their studio counterparts.
All band members take a turn at the microphone, with the bulk of the vocals handled by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. Ace Frehley makes his live debut on “Shock Me,” complete with guitar histrionics, while Peter Criss is credited with the album’s more mellow moments.
Possibly the most contrasting moment on the album is when the orchestral strings of “Beth” fade into the ominous, rumbling bass that precedes the Armageddon-esque riff of “God of Thunder”– the heaviest song in the Kiss arsenal. This song perfectly symbolizes the onstage persona of Simmons.
The album closes with the rabble-rousing Kiss party anthem, “Shout It Out Loud,” before coming to somewhat of a premature end. Since the album only draws from the preceding three studio albums and duplicates no tracks from Kiss’ prior live album entitled Alive, Kiss were left with a shortage of material (although “Hooligan,” “Take Me,” and “Do You Love Me” were originally slated for inclusion). Kiss therefore recorded five new tracks to complete a full double album, with Stanley’s chest-thumping “All American Man” and Frehley’s stellar “Rocket Ride” being the picks of the bunch.
There has been great debate over how “live” this album actually was, and whether or not it was a worthy successor to the legendary Alive album. Whatever your thoughts are, there is no disputing that this album provides a thrilling listen and stands as one of the finest live albums of the era.
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