The KISS RE-REVIEW SERIES Part 16: Β

Β β Paul StanleyΒ (1978 Casablanca solo album, 1997 Mercury remaster)
With the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, we know that Paul Stanley was capable of pretty muchΒ running Kiss by himself.Β During much of the 1980s, Gene Simmonsβ participation in Kiss had a severe drop.Β Paul took the reins and the band more or less sounded like Kiss.Β With that in mind, itβs no surprise that Paulβs 1978 solo album was also very Kiss-like.Β Of the four, Paulβs album had an βif it ainβt broke, donβt fix itβ attitude.Β His solo songs sound very much like his Kiss songs.Β Co-producing with Paul was Kansas producer Jeff Glixman.
Paul had an βaceβ in his pocket, so to speak.Β On lead guitar was shredder Bob Kulick.Β Previously, Bob auditioned for Kiss but was squeezed out at the last minute by Ace Frehley.Β He also played ghost guitar on the studio tracks of Alive II.Β Now he was out of the shadows on Paulβs album, and his work here absolutely stuns.Β Itβs a feedback-laden monster of rock.
Paulβs songs are often overblown, and usually loud.Β βTonight You Belong to Meβ is one such track:Β melodramatic, riffy and loud.Β It rocks hard.Β It has loads of hooks, killer playing, and lead vocals that slay.Β Few singers could touch Paul Stanley in his prime. Β If that riff sounds familiar, the Hellacopters ripped it off for the intro to a song appropriately titled “Paul Stanley” (from 1999’s Grande Rock).
βMove Onβ is upbeat, Kiss-like rock and roll augmented with female backing vocals.Β Itβs the only song that Kiss played live on their 1979 tour.Β It probably fits that standard Kiss mold better than any other tune on the album.Β βAinβt Quite Rightβ brings things down with a dark acoustic ballad, quite different from past songs Paul has written.Β Its sad sound was fairly new territory for an upbeat rocker.
Hold on tight for βWouldnβt You Like to Know Meβ.Β If this song was covered by a pop-punk band (pick one:Β Sum 41, Blink 182, any of that ilk) it could be huge today.Β Itβs loud, brash and incredibly rocking, but Paul outsings any punk-pop upstart.Β When Paul released his solo One Live Kiss album/video in 2008, βWouldnβt You Like to Know Meβ was one of its highlights.Β Kudos must be given to drummer Richie Fontana for kicking it in the nuts.
One of rockβs most legendary (and hardest hitting) timekeepers plays drums on the massive βTake Me Away (Together As One)β. Β You don’t associate Carmine Appice with Kiss, but there he is one of Paul’s songs. Β Itβs a bombastic arrangement of electrics and acoustics, and one of Paulβs most devastating tracks. Β Carmine turnsΒ it from “stun” to “kill” with his dominating presence. Β At 5:26 this is the longest song on the album and as close as Paul gets to epic.
Side two is just as vigorous as side one.Β βItβs Alrightβ has a bright shimmer, plenty of hooks and guitars.Β It easily could have been a Kiss classic.Β βGirl if you want me to stay satisfied, girl if you want me to stay for the night, itβs alright.βΒ Sure sounds like Kiss to me. Β The guitars have a very “rock and roll” vibe, a classic progression. Β Paul has a knack for riffs like this, and “It’s Alright” is one of the best.
Paulβs single was the schlocky piano ballad βHold Me, Touch Me (Think of Me When Weβre Apart)β.Β Fans will either love it or hate it.Β Itβs a song that could have been an AM radio hit on a 70s light rock station. Β Lionel Richie could have recorded it. Β The guitar solo cooks, and that is all Paul. Β He handled all the guitars on this song.Β Love it or hate it, it was the second most successful solo Kiss single after Aceβs βNew York Grooveβ.
As the album draws to a close, βLove in Chainsβ hits hard with punchy drums and choppy guitars.Β But itβs just a jab, compared to the closer βGoodbyeβ, which finishes things off with a flourish and hot riffing. Β There is a cool descending guitar part, a superior chorus, and some seriously cool and busy bass by Eric Nelson. Β “Goodbye” is a brilliant closer, and it held that slot on Paul’s 2006 solo tour.
Paulβs was the second shortest of the solo albums (only Peterβs being shorter), but it packed more punch than any except Ace Frehleyβs.Β Everybody has their favourites, and Aceβs album is always held in high esteem.Β Ace stepped out of his box and delivered.Β Meanwhile, Paul stuck to what he does best, and nailed it.Β Itβs a βsafeβ solo album, but lethal when it clicks with you.
5/5 stars
To be continued…
Original mikeladano.com review: Β 2012/07/22

