Label: Polystar Records (Japan), P33C-20005
Style: Hard Rock, Arena Rock, Glam Rock
Country: New York City, U.S.
Time: 30:33
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 196 Mb
Of
all the bands who are regarded as "Classic", I will never understand
why KISS is considered such. To be frank, they were the 70's version of
Nickleback; a shitty, generic, Rock band with obnoxiously catchy singles
and a basic understanding of "listenable music". With this in mind, one
must always remember that even the worst of bands can produce a good
album once in a while. KISS had that in Dressed to Kill.
Despite
being only thirty whole minutes long, Dressed to Kill has a myriad of
good tunes. Room Service features some of Ace Frehley's best guitar
playing, riffing his way through excellent solos as Paul Stanley lights
up with some excellent, hard hitting, vocals. One of the most notable
changes from their first two albums was that Paul Stanley did the
majority vocals in this album, as Gene Simmons was majority for their
first two. This can be attributed to the fact that Paul's vocals were
better received and of the financial failure of their sophomore album,
which Simmon's was lead vocalist of.
Getaway is a very fun track,
with booming drums from Peter Criss as Ace Frehley goes completely
bonkers, doing all of the guitar work on the track with such excellent
virtuosity. Rock Bottom remains one of my personal favorite tracks, with
its somber tone reminiscent of Led Zeppelin IV's ethereal production
quality. The sound quality of this record is top notch, especially when
the hard guitar half breaks through the strings, completely doing a 180
on the entire track's atmosphere.
Of course I would be remiss if I
didn't mention KISS' magnum opus. I'm talking, of course, about Rock And
Roll All Nite. A bursting guitar-heavy track combining the talents of
all four members of KISS evenly, creating a track that describes KISS to
a tee. To be fair as well, Simmon's is the perfect vocalist for this
track, as his hissing and talkative vocal performance add to the raw and
unbalanced nature of the tune, as tamberine's begin meshing with
guitars, chorus, and percussion to create pure madness.
Dressed to
Kill is not perfect, it has flaws like every other KISS album. Cheesy
lyrics, squeaky clean production, basic formula for every song, and
repetition ad nauseum are easy to point out. The change is what Dressed
to Kill offers that other KISS albums don't. That lies in its creative
guitar playing from Ace Frehley, one of the best Rock singles of the
1970's, and Paul Stanley being majority singer for the record. In this
instance, KISS reached their apex, and would never reach this height
ever again.
(sputnikmusic.com/review/71446/KISS-Dressed-To-Kill/)
Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog.
D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The
second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the
format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).
01. Room Service (03:03)
02. Two Timer (02:51)
03. Ladies In Waiting (02:34)
04. Getaway (02:46)
05. Rock Bottom (03:56)
06. C'mon And Love Me (03:01)
07. Anything For My Baby (02:36)
08. She (04:10)
09. Love Her All I Can (02:43)
10. Rock And Roll All Nite (02:49)
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Thanks for the KISS P33C series
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