August 31, 2010

Hunt And Gather: "Special Melvins Edition" - Part 2

"A peace together, a piece apart. A piece of wisdom from  our hearts."
L to R Buzz, Dale, Mark D
Buzz, Dale, Kevin
The 90's appear to have been a time of turmoil for The Melvins; Joe Preston replaced Lori Black on bass,  just as quickly he was out again, with Lori then returning. She was then ousted for the second and final time, (rumors of her death persist) leaving the position vacant for the recording of their Atlantic Records debut, "Houdini." Mark Deutrom, cowboy hat and all, quickly filled the void. I can imagine that Dale abandoned the thought of a cohesive rhythm section and just became content anchoring the band all by himself. He may even have had to glance over his left shoulder at gig or two, to remind himself who was occupying that side of the stage at the moment.
The band made three records for Atlantic Records. Their major label experience is generally recounted as unpleasant, as Atlantic put them through the wringer for not being commercial enough or moving enough units. The band endured long tours supporting bands like "Primus," "White Zombie," "Nine Inch Nails," etc ("Tool," was one of the few big bands that The Melvins felt treated them well and the bands would remain friends and regular collaborators for years to come. During this time, the band also gained a reputation for antagonizing crowds, who routinely booed and threw garbage at them during their opening slots. They regularly played "Lysol," in it's entirety, switched to playing very quietly (see the song "Montreal," for an example of this) or blasting them with noise.
After their split with Atlantic the band began experimenting with even more strange styles, releasing albums of quiet and ambient material, electronic weirdness, noise etc, truly cementing  their reputation as "Captain Beefheart playing heavy metal." They bid farewell to Mark D and hooked up with former "Cows," bassist Kevin Rutmanis. At the end of the decade and a few releases on various independent labels they found a new home with Mike Patton's Ipecac Records - a place where they finally could make their records as weird as they wanted.

Houdini (1993)
Capitalizing on the band as part of the Seattle scene, even though the band had relocated to SF and finally LA as far back as "Ozma," Atlantic records signed the band to a three album deal.
Whatever dollar amount from their advance went toward the production of this record, it was worth every last cent. This record sounds huge! Dale's drums sound like they were tracked inside the hull of the Titanic. Buzz's guitars sound crunchy and razor sharp (much like Cap N' Crunch cereal). Billy Anderson and Ggggarth Richardson built their reputations around this record.
"Hooch," just blasts out of the speakers; one of my very favorite songs by anybody. In fact if you put the first 5 songs ("Hooch," "Night Goat," "Lizzy," their awesome cover of Kiss' "Goin' Blind," and "Honeybucket," ) in that exact order as the opening of a greatest hits package (if someone were foolish enough to attempt such an endeavor) you'd hear little argument from me. The ultra-heavy "Hag Me," is a return to their sludge roots and "Joan of Arc," is another standout.
Kurt Cobain was credited with producing several of the songs but his contributions were downplayed to mostly sleeping in the studio by most account,s as well as contributing some guitar noodling to the instrumental"Sky Pup," and extra percussion on "Spread Eagle Beagle."
Also virtually absent was Lori Black, who is credited on the album sleeve but whose bass parts were played pretty much entirely by Dale or Buzz.
"Houdini," perhaps due to more money available for studio time, also marks the first inclusion of their experimental songs, not meant to be recreated live (although they did go through the painstaking process of doing exactly this, eventually touring the whole album, as documented on "A Live History of Greed and Lust.") They would continue to incorporate such bits of abstract weirdness into future releases, helping them to always defy neat categorization, a practice that may even have alienated certain members of their fan base but also added variety to the records.

Prick (1994)
Strong feelings abound about this record. Not only is it a sore spot with many fans, it occupies a special territory where, along with Lou Reed's "Metal Machine Music," (and their own "Colossus of Destiny,") it is hotly debated whether it's an actual album release or just some type of joke.
"Lissen hear, Mr. Buzzo, this don't sound like no kinda record I ever heard before. We payed to hear you all play your guitars and such, proper! You done cheated all these good people, Mr. Buzzo and that ain't right."
The weird part is that the same criticism was made by the band themselves about Joe Preston's solo EP. "The Eagle Has Landed" and "Bricklebrit," especially, could easily sound at home on this record. Different.

Stoner Witch (1994)
Sounding like they deliberately set out to deliver at least as much of a kick in the face as "Houdini," Buzz's roaring vocals have never sounded more intense as on songs like"Queen," and "Sweet Willy Rollbar." If The Melvins were the type of band that had "hits," "Revolve" would be one of their biggest. Contrasting quiet pieces like the almost jazzy sounding "Goose Freight Train," and the seemingly spaghetti-western influenced interludes of "Roadbull," keep things interesting as well the ominous intro of "Magic Pig Detective," before it joins the others as some of the best gut punching rock tunes the band ever did. "At The Stake," takes on a familiar sludgy pace but with more melodic vocals and understated, almost clean, guitar playing. Then they drift in to the opiate invoking, "Shevil," before the ambient waves of the atmospheric,"Lividity," draw it to the close. Along with "Houdini," this is considered one of their most accessible releases (not usually at good sign) but, in this case, not commercial sounding or lacking in heaviness.


Stag (1996)
This last Atlantic album is both blessed and cursed with having "a lot of variety." Heavy on experimentation in the studio, they start by
incorporating more unusual instruments into heavier tunes, something they hadn't really done previously. There's the trombone on "Bar-X-the Rocking M," and slide licks on "The Bloat."
The opener, "The Bit," features Dale Crover's sitar playing and is an absolute ass-kicker. Also Buzz's clean vocals on "Black Bock," are a bit startling.
 The problem I have when listening to this record is that the experimental noise and ambient bits are either too many, too long or sequenced in a way that makes for a tedious listen.
"Goggles," is the most sonically violent recording the band has made since "Eggnog," but it's got an eerie, creepy vibe as well. I remember reading an interview with Buzz where he mentions trying to find the shittiest mics available for that song, so it sounded "just brutal." mission accomplished.
Dale's "Cottonmouth," sounds like he has actually shoved a bunch of cotton in his mouth to sing it.
Certainly some of the more bizarre music to make it on a major label.
The melty, ambient, "Sterilized," and "Lacrimosa," change the pace again before "Bertha's and "Captain Pungent," "heavy-it-up," again. The Chipmunk vocals ending "Skin Horse," are another example of many weird ideas crammed into one album
This record has a lot of good stuff on it, especially early on, but feels kind of unsettling, and/or unsatisfying as it seems to get pulled in all sorts of directions toward the end. I often overlook a lot of these tunes, when are a lot of them deserve a few listens (most, actually, just not all at once.) Depending on your mood, (weird, mellow, aggressive) this is an album where you definitely will need to press the skip button. The Melvins at their most self-indulgent and maniacal

Honky (1997)
The quiet, spooky or experimental noise tracks that permeated "Stag," now appear in much greater numbers, actually comprising most of the record. It actually sounds a bit more cohesive, less scattershot, but just as adventurous. Good luck trying to pigeonhole the band now ...Where their heroes Black Flag and Flipper pushed the envelope by, slowing down to a trudge when everyone else was playing fast, The Melvins started slow and brutally heavy, then changed things up by becoming, quiet, ominous, ambient and noisy. "They Must All Be Slaughtered," opens the record with something like Halloween sounds and chanting, like the soundtrack to a movie you might not want to see.  Dale's drum sound has been changed dramatically to a thin, hollow, almost brittle sound, turnings things on their head even more. "Momibus Hibachi," and "Lovely Butterfly," are the two songs that made it most often into the live set, the former a more "traditional," Melvins song (meaning played with just guitar, bass and drums and things like that) the latter, an industrial sounding combination of junkyard percussion (Dale's stacks of cracked cymbals) and what sounds like a dentist drill also  reminding me of nearly accapella shouting of "The Bloat," on the previous album.
"Laughing With Lucifer At Satan's Sideshow" is a major highlight for me; creepy circus soundtrack interspersed with sound-bytes quoting Atlantic Records execs ("we don't do special packaging for bands that haven't gone gold.") It's an amazing and hilarious "fuck you."
The sprawling "Air Breather In The Arms of Morpheus" sounds like it could have inspired Pink Mountaintops' "Axis of Evol,"  where, as a reaction to past heaviness, that band started playing slow, low-fi, soma-holidays of songs, that sound like floating toward the abyss. Songs like "Grin," and "Harry Lauders Walking Stick" remind me a bit of Ween in their "push The Little Daisies," mode. "Freaktose," ends the album, a heavy instro with frantic soloing, then 26 minutes of silence.  If you're a fan of their weirder, more "out-there," stuff, this is one to get. 

The Maggot (1999)
I'm not sure if the relationship  between Mike Patton and the Melvins is what you'd call a match made in heaven; maybe some weird part of purgatory, but they are kindred spirits if ever there were. The band's first release on Patton's "Ipecac," label was "The Trilogy," ("The Maggot," "The Bootlicker," and "The Crybaby," also the first to feature bassist Kevin Rutmanis.
 "The Maggot," sounds like a metal album, but a metal album recorded by the Melvins so you still don't know exactly what to expect.
They continue their mission to confuse and annoy the CD buyer by splitting each song down the middle, into 2 separate tracks (like 8-tracks. Remember those?)
These songs go for the jugular, grab it, rip it out, take a few bites out of it and throw it on the floor. Chainsaw guitars that could have come from Metallica. If you like cool, crunchy guitar riffs (I do) you might like this a lot.

The song titles seem meant to confuse as well "amazon" and "AMAZON," are two different songs, each with part 1 and part 2. "We all Love JUDY," also should not be confused with the track simply called "Judy," both, of course in 2 parts. I tried to download this off of Napster when it first came out and gave up in frustration.
Again the Melvins thumb their nose at anyone daring to play this album on random or shuffle . The message, loud and clear is, "you're either listening to this bitch in it's entirety or not at all."
"Manky," churns and chugs to life after a few minutes of digital silence. All blazing in their directness and intensity.
"amazon," (lower case) is short fast and loud. It's capitalized counterpart is noisy, heavy and reminiscent of "Zodiac," along with the "The Horn Bearer," it gives me the excuse to use a fancy word like "cacophony," to describe it.
The finale "See how Pretty, See How Smart," answers the hundreds of doom metal bands they inspired with a punishing 10 minute epic to regain their crown. The show stopper though is their cover of Fleetwood Mac's "The Green Manalishi (With The Two-Prong Crown,)" officially the best song ever written. Beautiful.


The Bootlicker (1999)
From a scream and a squelch of feedback, to a whisper, the album closing sleigh bells of "The Maggot," continue into the first cut of this second installment. This album is  the quiet ying to "The Maggot's" aggressive yang. The songs are delivered in a laid back, sometimes dreamy or floaty style, with Buzz utilizing his "Black Bock," voice to it's maximum potential. The music of  "Toy," grooves slinkily into "Let It All Be," the chorus' mellow vocal delivery and cowbell remind me of Fu Manchu in a weird way. That song in particular has taken on new life with the Big Business-2 drummer, version of the band, becoming a totally devastating live crowd-pleaser.
Interestingly, there is no similarity between these tunes and the unsettling, electronic nightmarescapes of "Honky." All songs seem to be played with just guitar bass and vocals. The only exceptions are album closer "Prig," which gives us some rumbling bursts of noise before, pretty much morphing into a different song - the only Melvins tune up to the this point, that I can recall featuring acoustic guitar, and the minute long "We We," (named probably because the pitch shifting makes a "wee wee," sound) acts as a bridge between "Black Santa," and "Up The Dumper," (the song titles are fantastic on this by the way).
"Jew Boy Flower Head," has a sort of lounge jazz feel, the walking bass-lines showcasing Rutmanis in a way previous bass-players rarely enjoyed.  Only "Mary Lady Bobby Kins," sounds remotely like pop.
It may take a few listens for some to appreciate this record but really, compared to "the Maggot," I can't really say I have a preference for one or the other. My opinion is that the two records compliment each other perfectly.

The Crybaby (2000)
So if "The Maggot," is the heavy record, "The Bootlicker," is the quiet record, "The Crybaby," is the "cover tunes," and "guest appearances," record.
Their "Smells Like Teen Spirit" cover is only interesting if you know that they got Leif Garrett to sing on it and, I suppose also if you know who Leif Garrett actually is. He does an admirable job, actually, even though he messes with the phasing during the verse, like he's trying to put his own spin on it or hasn't heard the song. Minor complaint aside, Leif cranks it out. Nice job.
The Jesus Lizard cover with David Yow singing is a bit limp sounding. "Ramblin' Man," is pretty much just a Hank III tune, even though the dude from Helmet is in there somewhere
"G.I. Joe," features Mike Patton and begins with some weird bleeps and bloops that make me wonder if they're done with instruments or if Patton is making the sounds with his mouth like the dude from "Police Academy." Full lounge lizard mode for Mike earns full marks.
A few of these songs ("Mine Is No Disgrace, "Skeleton Key " ) sound exactly like the year 1993 or 1992, I think. Not what the Melvins were doing in '92 and '93, what everyone else was doing. Quiet-loud-quiet - whatever.
"Divorced," featuring Tool sounds pretty bad-ass before becoming almost intolerable during the drum solo halfway through, partly because of the steady, maddening hum over top and partly because it's a drum solo, then returns to various goofiness before holding us hostage again with weird noise in an apocalyptic meltdown
"Dry Drunk," is pretty amusing and the better David Yow track. (Sobriety can indeed be "boring as fuck.") Hank III is back for another round with "Okie From Muskokie."
Of the albums that comprise the trilogy, "The Crybaby," is the most diverse and experimental but the least essential. These collaborations are an interesting idea and, I'm sure a ton of fun to record, but in terms of popping the thing on the stereo and listening to it all the way through, it comes off sounding more like a so-so mix-tape.

Electroretard (2001)
Aside from the great cover of The Wipers "Youth of America," this collection of "remixes," "covers and "new-and improveds " is more of a novelty, especially since the Man's Ruin Records version was likely very fancy with enough elaborate artwork/limited vinyl or packaging to cause the label to eventually go tits-up. You get a "Cows," cover, a "Pink Floyd," cover and a lot of grating noise ("Shitstorm," would have not have been out of place on "Prick.) The remixes or whatever they are, range from "weird and okay," to annoying. Not an essential record. (Best title and album cover though, I must say.)

August 29, 2010

Things I've Learned From Pro Wrestling

"I am a sweetheart, I am a prom queen, I am some puppies. What, Daisy?"
abdullahvssabu.jpg Abdullah the Butcher vs. Sabu image by critko
AbdullahThe Butcher: "Sudanese People"
Abdullah The Butcher is a "Wildman from Sudan,"  known for having the most unique and recognizable set of "moobs," on the planet as well as for his signature maneuver: "stabbing someone with a fork."
His motivation, as with other wild-people from weird countries, seems like it may be that he actually wants to eat people
He also operates a restaurant in Atlanta called "Abdullah The Butcher's House of Ribs and Chinese Food."
I've gotta credit Ash for asking if they serve foreheads there. I don't know, man ... I don't know.
The Headbangers: "Headbangers"
The Headbangers are typical of heavy metal enthusiasts in that they wear kilts and Marilyn Manson (or occasionally White Zombie) t-shirts wherever they go, since these have been universally acknowledged as the greatest heavy metal bands of all time. Come to think of it, I may put my kilt on and listen to a bit of the ol' Marilyn Manson later. One of them sometimes wears one of those chains that you connect from your nose-ring to your earring, which I always thought were a bad idea, for obvious reasons. He wisely removed it before wrestling. The Headbangers were also were in the habit of "moshing," with each other in the ring, which, as we all know, is more or less the same as jumping around like a retard.
They may also have been involved in some capacity with the Columbine school shootings.
The Fabulous Rougeau Brothers: "People from Quebec"
People from Quebec are Canadian but also French, and being French in wrestling is the equivalent of being gay. Not only do they hate America's freedom but also have a superior attitude, prefer wine to Budweiser and kiss each other on both cheeks.

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Adorable Adrian Adonis: "Gay People"
Adrian Adonis is a guy who, at one point, just decided to start wearing scarves and rouge, (a sure sign of gayness) also pink tights. It wasn't clear if his gayness was a lifestyle choice or just to psych people out. Whoever he was wrestling would be super creeped-out that he might somehow touch their butt or something. 
His opponent would be like, "What the hell? Is this guy wearing a bonnet and leg-warmers? - Bam! - Elbow to the face! Sneaky.
"Foreign Objects"
Before I can even remember knowing what the word "foreign," meant, (except maybe from the band Foreigner) I knew what a "foreign object," was. It doesn't mean that an object needs a passport to get into a country and a green card to work, or that certain objects don't speak the same "object language," as each other and sometimes go on vacation to other "object countries," and take lots of pictures and then call the "object consulate," if they get pick-pocketed and lose their ID or something.
Nope, it doesn't mean that at all. A foreign object is something that doesn't belong in the ring, near the ring or maybe the area. This doesn't include guns as they evidently don't have metal detectors for wrestlers to walk through on the way to the ring. Our buddy Abdullah would be pretty hooped, in that case wouldn't he?
I am old enough to actually remember referees "patting down," the wrestlers like they're getting jacked up by the cops or something. In my youthful naivete I didn't even know what "getting jacked up by the cops," meant yet, but I knew that the reason none of the refs ever found anything is because the best place in the world to hide something bad is right in your sweaty "dick and balls," area at the front of your wrestling tights, cause they can't really grab on to your junk for very long or anything,  (I'm glad to have known this information when I was eight). The other added bonus is that, by the time you pull it out, that weird sort of homemade shiv they sometimes use has been marinating in ball-sweat for about half an hour,  adding insult to injury (and maybe giving them a nice infection while you're at it). Lastly, I'm also extremely grateful to have sort of known what a shiv was, when I was eight.

August 26, 2010

Name Your Poison: "Alcohol"

"Johnny was a punk, always wore his leather. Johnny was a punk didn't care about the weather."

You like booze, I like booze, musicians like booze. I'm doing a series of lists about substances, the folks who enjoy them and the ones that destroy them. (Hey, that rhymes! Fuck off.)

Grace Slick
Grace may have dabbled in a variety of substances throughout the swinging 60's but it was, undoubtedly, under the influence of good old fashion hooch, during an especially wrecked performance in Germany that she started yelling, "Who won the war? Who won the war?"
Okay then.
Rory Gallagher
Because he blew out his liver, requiring a transplant, and because he was Irish, most who have actually heard of him, assume he was a huge boozer. Pals say he was an average drinker at best, who liked his pills a lot.
I just wanted an excuse to mention this amazing and underrated player, with the beat up Strat, who nearly joined the Stones instead of Ron Wood.
*Unverified awesome rock legend; a reporter asks Jimi Hendrix what it's like to be the greatest guitar player in the world. He answers "Go ask Rory Gallagher."
John Bonham
One of the best rock drummers of all time, Bonzo didn't necessarily hit the booze or drugs much harder than other members of Led Zeppelin, he just had the misfortune to pass out face down and aspirate on his own vomit. Why couldn't it have been Robert Plant?
Bob Stinson
I never knew Bob personally, and therefore, I am probably unqualified to make this judgement call, but Bob strikes me less as the classic alcoholic or degenerate boozer (Westerberg and the rest of the band likely qualified as the latter) than he does, someone recklessly bent on self-destruction. The difference; if boozing didn't kill bob, something else likely would have. He was their Belushi .. or Chris Farley or Artie Lange if you prefer. His choice to continue drinking and drugging, despite his diabetes speaks to this.
Bon Scott
Did Bon really drink or party more than any other Scottish immigrant to Australia would, while fronting the biggest rock band in the world? On the night of February 19, 1980 he did and that was all it took.
Jim Morrison
I once heard a review of Oliver Stone's movie "The Doors," where the Jim Morrison story was summed up this way:
"I'm nobody, I'm drunk, I'm famous, I'm drunk, I'm dead."
Don't forget "I whipped my dick out on stage one time and got arrested."
Jim went on to further prove that, alcohol does indeed make you fat.
Joe Walsh
A frequent guest on Howard Stern's TV and radio show, Joe often appeared wasted and, on one Channel 9 show, passed out under Howard's desk. When he rejoined The Eagles for their reunion tour he signed a contract that said he would stay on the wagon. Fortunately for them, he agreed, since Joe Walsh is the only thing remotely interesting about The Eagles,.
Eddie Van Halen
Who knew Eddie was absolutely shit-canned half the time his fingers were flying across the fretboard. I mean, the whole band did the whole, "carrying a Jack Daniel's bottle everywhere," schtick and were king-shit during the entire cocaine-fuelled glam rock circuit... Eddie's getting sloshed was affecting the band and his relationship with Valerie Burtonelli, (bleh) after the smoke had cleared. then, I guess he took a few 28 day vacations to the old Betty Ford Hotel. I'd have assumed Eddie was the responsible one, at least over David Lee Roth, but Dave's hair all fell out, so they're even
GG Allin
"Didn't an overdose of smack kill GG?" you may ask. Well, sort of... I believe the official cause of death was, "Being GG Allin." Along with "fighting," and "fucking," the third commandment of GG-dom was "drinking." He was buried with a bottle of Jim Beam, as per his wishes.

Alice Cooper
So foolish of me to neglect him on the first go-around. Alice checked himself into a mental hospital for his near fatal alcohol addiction, which lead to several albums which, he claims to have no recollection of writing or recording. Alice has been sober for many years and has switched from boozing as a pastime, to golf.
Shane McGowan
Can you mention alcohol without mentioning Shane McGowan? Well, yes you can, but you can't mention Shane McGowan without mentioning alcohol. Officially the most famous piss-tank since Bukowski (Dean Martin was bullshit) it's amazing that he can even stand, let alone get onstage and spit out the lyrics to Pogues classics. (Which are difficult to sing, don't kid yourself.)

August 21, 2010

The Awesome Hall of Fame & The Hall of Total Bullshit

"The badge means you suck, a child lays there dead. When you look back, what goes through your head?"
Awesome Hall of Fame: Frank Frazetta
 Simply the best. If there is some type of supreme being, controlling our humble universe, I want ask why he felt the need to call upon Frank Frazetta and Dio at almost exactly the same time? Is this part of some larger plan?
Hall of Total Bullshit: Can-Con
In case you were wondering, this is the reason we have Nickelback, The Barenaked Ladies Our Lady 
Peace & Brian Adams to name a few. It's also why you are guaranteed to hear the same couple of songs by Rush, The Tragically Hip, Loverboy, April Wine, Kim Mitchell or  Guess Who songs on a constant rotation at least once per hour on classic rock radio. It's not because someone at that station likes them especially;  It's because it's actually the law.
Awesome Hall of Fame: Java Jacket
Even the idea that someone invented this is completely ridiculous, yet now, whenever I don't have one, I automatically think, "How the fuck am I going to pick up this hot cup of coffee without burning living shit out of myself?"
I bet the guy who invented these is richer than God.
Hall of Total Bullshit: Mothballs
Moths hate these because they stink. So, who's actually the idiot?
Awesome Hall of Fame: "The Kids"
Yes, Milo (left) and Violet (right)  are actually shaking hands.  If this were much cuter, I might actually start to hemorrhage.
Hall of Total Bullshit: Bettie Page
Okay, so you made a bunch of spanking videos a hundred years ago. Why do I care about you again? 
Oh, wait: I don't.
Awesome Hall of Fame: Scented Poop Bag
Why endure the unpleasant odor of dog shit, when you can enjoy the much more palatable smell of dog shit and vanilla!


Hall of Total Bullshit: Zima
Remember Zima? What the hell was that?
Awesome Hall of Fame: Tourettes
If I had to have a serious neurological disorder I'd want it to be one that made me tell everyone to suck my ass, and get away with it.

Hall of Total Bullshit: Faux-hawk
Most retarded haircut ever. I bet this guy could go for an ice-cold Zima right about now.




August 5, 2010

The Earth's Greatest Album Covers... Ever !!! "Metallica - Metal Up Your Ass"

"I must be hungry. 'Cause I go crazy. Over your leather boots
Now baby, I know that's not normal. But I love you."
It's difficult to understand why Elektra rejected this original design and title for Metallica's first album, featuring a large knife, protruding from a toilet bowl. I mean, what better way to invoke the essence of kick-ass, old-school thrash metal than the idea of someone getting stabbed in the rectum? They ultimately opted for the less offensive title "Kill 'Em All," and the now famous picture of a bloody hammer. Pussies!

Live Fast/Die Fast Comes Alive! "Kiss - Alive!"

"Excuse me Monsieur Eightball, who told you to get me high?"
Is it official?
As official as they get.
Is it really live?
This has been the subject of debate, even amongst the parties directly involved.
Gene Simmons, the man who claim he "invented breathing and shoes," according to the late, great Ronnie Dio, is one of these parties, so there's likely a hefty amount of bullshit being shovelled
 Gene says only obvious mistakes were overdubbed, while producer Eddie Kramer has stated that only Ace's guitar was live and the rest tracked in studio.
May 16 at Cobo Arena, Detroit, (Rock City)  June 21 at Music Hall, Cleveland, Ohio (Greater Regional District of Rock)
June 20; two nearly sold-out shows at the Orpheum Theatre in Davenport, Iowa (Independent Municipality of Rock) and July 23 at TheConvention Center in Wildwood, NJ, (Metropolitan County of Rock)
What are the details?
Allegedly record, if it was recorded live, during the "Dressed To Kill," tour March-July 1975 in????Perhaps more than any record, except "Frampton Comes Alive," this is a live record that defined the artist completely. The live versions have much more energy than the more sterile sounding studio records. "Deuce," "Parasite," "Firehouse," and "Cold Gin," benefit especially from the live treatment. Paul Stanley's soliloquy at the beginning of "Cold Gin; ("I heard some of you out there live to drink vodka and arrange juice..." is legendary and, of course the definitive, hit-single version of "Rock 'n' Roll All Nite," comes from this record. A few of the hokier (in my opinion) doo-wop flavoured numbers, "Got to Choose," "Nothin' To Loose," are here, but no real crap.
Whether it's an actual live recording or not, it's the sound of Kiss at their peak, the bloated dinosaurs, back when they were a real lean, mean rock band.
Above all, "Alive!" is Ace Frehley's finest hour. It's become popular to slag the spaceman, and in retrospect, he's a lot less likely to have become a guitar hero if his guitar didn't shoot rockets out of it, but if you're looking for a greasy bar-rock primer, this is it. Ace adds his slightly wasted, sloppy swagger to the handful of Jimmy Page licks in his arsenal and squeezes every note from his Les Paul with his patented bluesy vibrato in a way perhaps only Angus Young could rival. 
I hereby officially proclaim this to be the best Kiss recording
The Set:

1. "Deuce"
2. "Strutter"
3. "Got to Choose"
4. "Hotter Than Hell"
5. "Firehouse"
6. "Nothin' to Lose"
7. "C'mon and Love Me"
8. "Parasite"
9. "She"
10. "Watchin' You"
11. "100,000 Years"
12. "Black Diamond"
13. "Rock Bottom"
14. "Cold Gin"
15. "Rock and Roll All Nite"
16. "Let Me Go, Rock 'n' Roll"