Part 6 in a series on Ace Frehley! Missed the last part, “Cherokee Boogie”? Click here!

A Tribute to Ace Frehley – Return of the Comet (1997 Shock Records)
Last time we talked about a tribute album with a new recording by Ace. Â This time, we’re talking about a tribute album with new recordings by the Comet! Â Return of the Comet even features some of the same artists that were on Spacewalk: Â Tracii Guns, Gilby Clarke and the brothers Abbott (Dimebag Darrell and Vinnie Paul) are on both albums. Â And like Spacewalk, this one also comes with a guitar pick. Â This time it’s a Bruce Kulick pick, because the CD also features a cool bonus: Bruce’s debut solo track, “Liar”.
This is a pretty good tribute CD. Â Somebody called Bruiz does a faithful reproduction of the “Rock Bottom” intro, which seques directly into Brian Tichy’s “Rip It Out”. Â I was familiar with Tichy from Zakk Wylde’s Pride and Glory, but he sings and plays every instrument on this. Â Everybody knows today how talented he is, but this was a revelation to me in 1997. Â Do I need to say that he does an excellent job on it? Â He also nails Anton Fig’s drum solo.
L.A. Guns is next, but it’s not Phil Lewis. Â It’s Ralph Saenz. Â You might know him better as Michael Starr from Steel Panther. Â So how’s their “Cold Gin”? Â It’s perfect for this band and this singer. Â Eric Singer and Karl Cochran take a shot at “Strange Ways”, but I don’t like their take on it too much. Â Eric’s vocal doesn’t suit the song in my opinion, and this version is too chunk-chunk-chunk.
“Getaway” was always a bit of a throwaway Kiss track, but I like the lesser known songs. Â Seattle’s Tubetop speed it up a fair measure, but that’s not the problem. Â I always identify this song with Peter Criss’ gritty voice. Â Who doesn’t? Â The singer, Gavin Gus, takes a smooth approach to the song, but sometimes Kiss songs aren’t meant to be tampered with too much. Â It improves as it gets harder at the end.
Then we have the Presidents of the United States of America. Â OK band I guess, but their stripped back sound is totally wrong for “Shout It Out Loud”. Â Having said that, the brilliance of the song itself still shines through. Â The album is immediately redeemed by a remarkable performance from a remarkable guitarist: Â Dimebag. Â He and Vinnie Paul stomp through “Snowblind”, a sludgy Ace classic. Â Wisely, Dime changed nothing about the song, except adding some trademark Dime guitar shrieks on top. Â It’s a totally appropriate touch. Â Even though his singing voice is nothing like Ace’s (he’s more Zakk Wylde than Ace Frehley) he still lays down a lead vocal that fits. Â Then his guitar solo rips your head off, end of story. Â Mind blown, the album can end here thank you very much!
We’re not even half through yet. Â Tod Howarth (ex-Frehley’s Comet) turns up with his own solo version of “Dancing With Danger”. Â It’s a Streetheart cover that Frehley’s Comet also did on Second Sighting. Â Tod tries to update the song for the 1990’s but fails. Â His voice is also noticeably lower. Â Then, Karl Cochran and Eric Singer are up with “Love Her All I Can”, a song originally sung and written by…Paul Stanley? Â Why? Â According to the liner notes, Cochran used to sing this song when he was in Frehley’s solo band in the 90’s. Â Cochran and Singer perfectly nail this one, right down to the guitar solo and those Simmons/Stanley harmony vocals. Â A winner.
Filler is “Speedin’ Back to My Baby” by Lee and Dallas (?).  As great as the original song is, I didn’t need to hear a jazzy country version of it.  It’s old-school country, swinging and authentic, but no thanks.  Thankfully Gilby Clarke comes to the rescue with the classic “Rocket Ride” from Alive II.  I love it.  I like it better than his version of “Shock Me” from Spacewalk, actually.
Richie Scarlet from Frehley’s Comet teams up with Beatlemania’s Mitch Weissman on Ace’s “Remember Me”. Â It’s great and much like the original. Â Then the Presidents are back for a second term, this time adding members of Tubetop and Kim Thayil of Soundgarden to the mix. Â They do a cool campfire version of “New York Groove” that sounds live. Â This is much better than “Shout It Out Loud”. Â Well done.
A Frehley’s Comet reunion is the climax of the album. Â Alumni Richie Scarlet, John Regan, Steve Werner and Arthur Stead are back to redo two unreleased Comet classics. Â These songs are Vinnie Vincent’s “Back On the Streets”, which is, in a word, awesome. Â It’s a dark ominous song with balls. Â Then they do “Animal” which was written by Regan and Stead (perhaps the reason it was never released before?). Â It has a funky little riff before it breaks into a cool anthemic chorus.
It’s best to think of the last two songs as bonus tracks, because they have little to do with Ace. Â From a forthcoming Howarth album named Cobalt Parlor is a lacklustre song called “California Burns”. Â I wanted to like this, really I did. Â It’s just a really nauseating attempt at being modern and heavy, and no sir I don’t like it. Â Sorry Tod. Â “The Liar” by Bruce Kulick is much better. Â I am a real fan of Kulick as a solo artist. Â He is an articulate, skilled player with a knack for melody. Â “The Liar” is a great instrumental, alternating between light and heavy, but always very lyrical. Â Just sing a lead vocal of your own over Bruce’s guitar, and you can imagine this as a “I Still Love You” rock ballad. Â This song was Bruce’s first ever post-Kiss solo release, and according to the liner notes, it serves two purposes. Â One: to end the album with an instrumental as Ace always did. Â Two: to tip the hat to the guy who succeeded in filling Ace’s shoes for over a decade.
I would recommend this tribute album to any serious Ace/Kiss fan, simply because it has some great cover versions of some obscure classics. Â That to me raises it above most cut-and-paste tribute albums that are out there on the market. Â There is a real sense of passion to this CD. Â John Regan put it together and you can tell by the attention to detail. Â Kudos, John.
3.5/5 stars

