Part three in a series on Ace Frehley! Â Missed the last part, Live + 1? Â Click here!
FREHLEY’S COMET – Second Sighting (1988 Megaforce Worldwide, 1998 reissue)
Ace was rushed on Second Sighting. Â I think that might be why it seems a little Tod (Howarth) heavy, song-wise. Â I recall in an old Hit Parader interview circa 1989, Ace complained that he had to follow a “stupid schedule” on Second Sighting, and the album suffered for it.
Having said that, I like Second Sighting better than Frehley’s Comet. Â I wondered what the hell Ace was high on when he made that comment about Second Sighting. Â Indeed, this is my favourite (post-Kiss) Ace CD. Â Let’s not forget how important context is. Â It was summer 1988. Â It was the summer of Def Leppard, Bon Jovi, Van Halen…and Ace Frehley! Â I was a kid in love with the rock.
The lead single was a choice Ace may regret today. Â Instead of coming out with a rocker, they went with “It’s Over Now”, a ballad sung by Tod! Â I always thought to myself: Â “If I was a kid and I didn’t know who Ace Frehley was, would I assume he’s the blond guy singing?” Â Tod’s singing, playing the keyboards (a huge friggin’ keyboard), and then he breaks into a guitar solo on one of those little Steinberger’s with no head…odd choice for lead video, no? Â Check out the close up on his two-handed tapping technique. Â The perfect Howarth hair. Â The video even seems to be vaguely about him and some chick. Â I still have to admit that my teenage self loved the song, it might be a ballad but it was a quality ballad with some soloing.
Thankfully, the album itself was lead off with a better track, “Insane”. Â It’s an Ace helmed good time party rocker. Â New drummer Jamie Oldaker (Eric Clapton) isn’t as fancy as the unavailable Anton Fig, but he throws in some pretty cool fills. Â Of course Ace lands the perfect solo, always complimenting the song.
The second track is a melancholy Dokken-esque rock ballad from Tod, “Time Ain’t Runnin’ Out”. Â It has a pretty significant keyboard part, which some may find obtrusive. Â Fortunately the guitar parts are great, and Tod’s powerful voice is easy on the ears. Â It also has a pretty solid chorus.
I don’t know the story behind “Dancin’ With Danger”, but it sure boasts an odd batch of co-writers, including Spencer Proffer, Streetheart, Ace, and Dana Strum from rival band Vinnie Vincent Invasion. Â The good news: Â it smokes. Â It has a ZZ Top-like sequencer part, adding a robotic pulse, but not taking anything else away. Â The riff is pretty heavy, Ace takes the lead vocal and an absolutely scorching solo.
The first side of the album ended with “Loser in a Fight” which is kind of…meh…eh… Â It’s OK, it’s heavy at least, but what I like about it is that is a co-lead vocal with both Ace and Tod. Â It’s that old Kiss trick that I used to like.
Ace enters on side two with some pretty cool guitar effects, leading into “Juvenile Delinquent”. Â Ace sings to a 16 year old girl and tells her to follow her dreams. Â It’s a little creepy when Ace sings “You’re looking good these days, believe it girl, I’m not blind.” Â I tend to just block that part out when I hear it. Â I think it’s a catchy song with a rock solid guitar base, and other than a couple lines in the song, I dig it.
“Fallen Angel” (not the Poison song that was a hit around the same time) is another Tod ballad. Â Like “It’s Over Now”, it’s a totally solid song, but this one has some more balls to it. Â It’s a little pissed-off sounding and the chorus is blazing hot. Â It is followed by “Separate” which to me sounds like vintage Ace. Â It’s sparse, the lyrics are basically spoken, and it has an extended guitar solo as the centerpiece. Â It kind of reminds me of “Don’t Run”, an Ace demo that eventually became “Dark Light” on The Elder.
“New Kind of Lover” is a wicked cool hard rocker about Tod Howarth gettin’ it on with a ghost. Â Once again, the solo is obviously Tod. Â Some may find it offensive that Ace didn’t play every single guitar solo on his album, but Frehley’s comet was a band, and Tod’s no slouch. Â His soloing style is opposite to Ace Frehley, which is one reason to allow him a couple solos. Â It also lent the album a modern edge.
As is the Ace tradition, the album closes with an “instrumental” (technically). Â Unlike past albums, it is not a nice pleasant “Fractured”. Â Instead, this is a blitz of riffage and solos called “The Acorn in Spinning”, which does in fact have words. Â The lyrics entirely spoken, Ace tells the tale of “this new fighter Bronx,” and a few other seedy characters. Â As it happens, that summer I was introduced to the Sierra PC game, Championship Boxing. Â Obsessed as I was with “The Acorn is Spinning”, I named my boxer Acorn and created a whole persona and cast of enemy boxers for him to challenge.
That’s the note I want this review to go out on, a note of personal anecdote, because for me this album is personal. Â Summer 1988. Â Ace may have been dissatisfied, but LeBrain 1988 was eager to hear the next one. Â Little did I know that Frehley’s Comet had to endure some serious lineup changes. Â But that’s next time. Â See you then!
4.5/5 stars
