Thanks kissnews.de for posting!
KISS – “Don’t Touch My Ascot” (2015 Warner, from the movie Scooby-Doo! and KISS: Rock and Roll Mystery)
The lovely Mrs. LeBrain got me a surprise gift a few weeks ago for our anniversary. Â This is a blu-ray movie called Scooby-Doo! and KISS: Rock and Roll Mystery. Â I haven’t watched it yet…I will some day…but it was a thoughtful gift idea because I’m a collector. Â It features the voices of Paul, Gene, Eric and Tommy, and hey…that counts for something, right?
According to the back cover, the story takes place at KISS-World. Â Sharp minded fans will remember that in 1979, Gene Simmons wanted to do a travelling amusement part/rock concert called Kiss World. Â Then there’s something about a witch and alternate dimensions and something called The Destroyer. Â I think the bonus feature, a Kiss blooper reel, will probably be better than the feature, but we shall see.
The main thing I’m interested is the new original Kiss song “Don’t Touch My Ascot”, a reference to Fred’s neckware. Â Kiss’s producer Greg Collins co-wrote this for the movie, and all four Kiss members sing on it. Â “Don’t Touch My Ascot” is a cute, old-tyme acoustic number with barbershop-like vocals. Â Paul Stanley goes first, but his voice is a mere whisper. Â Gene Simmons’ lines are next, and he sings in an exaggerated nasal voice. Â Cute, because he doesn’t normally sing like that on record. Â Please note though, the guy can actually sing! Â Take off the nasal intonation and that would be a pretty impressive bit of singing! Â Eric Singer goes next with the bridge and another verse, in that rasp he does so well. Â Here he reminds me of David Lee Roth! Â (Think: “Big Bad Bill”.) Â After a brief acoustic solo, Tommy Thayer goes last. Â He has the blandest voice of the four, but since everybody is harmonizing behind him, it all works out OK.
There are two catches. Â 1) The song is only 1:13 long. Â 2) You can’t buy it anywhere. Â It’s only in the movie (and on youtube). Â There’s the rub. Â You can make an mp3 file from the youtube video, but the fidelity is pretty iffy.
A rating for a track like this is pretty meaningless, especially without the context of the movie, but whatever. Â It’s Kiss and I love Kiss.
4/5 stars
