50 years of KISS: Band prepares to take final bow at NYC's Madison Square Garden
NEW YORK CITY - KISS is taking over New York City this weekend in celebration of their final "End of the Road World Tour" shows at Madison Square Garden.
The band plans to hang up their platform boots after two back-to-back shows at The Garden.
"Kiss was born in New York City. On 23rd Street. Half a century ago. It will be a privilege and honor to finish touring at Madison Square Garden, 10 blocks and 50 years from where we first started," the band said in a statement.
Fifty years ago, four young New Yorkers dragged their guitars, amps and drums to a loft on 23rd Street in New York, dreaming of becoming the biggest band in the world.
(L-R) Gene Simmons, Eric Singer, Paul Stanley and Tommy Thayer of KISS visit SiriusXMs The Howard Stern Show. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for SiriusXM)
The band is currently made up of original members Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons as well as Eric Singer and Tommy Thayer. Their best-known songs include "Rock and Roll All Nite," "I Was Made for Lovin’ You" and "Detroit Rock City."
A look back at 50 years of KISS
Here is a look back at major events in Kiss' history, taken from Associated Press interviews with Kiss members, quotes they gave to other media and material from band members' autobiographies:
1973: Gene Simmons, who worked briefly as a teacher and loved horror films and comic books, and cabbie Paul Stanley, who once dropped passengers off at Madison Square Garden to see Elvis Presley and vowed someday he'd be on that same stage, exit their band Wicked Lester and begin searching for bandmates to put together a true spectacle: an act where the show and the visuals were as important as the music. They find drummer Peter Criss, who had placed an ad in a music paper looking for a band, and Ace Frehley, who showed up at auditions with one red sneaker, one orange sneaker and a guitar.
Each member adopts a specific stage identity: Simmons the demon; Stanley the starchild; Frehley the spaceman, and Criss the catman. The band hones their act with tiny club gigs, and by New Year's Eve, lands a support slot on the bill with Blue Öyster Cult. Simmons accidentally sets his hair ablaze that night while breathing fire. (It would happen many times over the years, to the point where they stationed a roadie with a sopping wet towel nearby.)
American rock group Kiss arrive at London airport for their first European tour, already sporting black and silver make up and costumes. (Photo by Peter Cade/Central Press/Getty Images)
1974: Kiss releases its self-titled debut album, and its follow-up, "Hotter Than Hell."
1975: The band releases its third album, "Dressed To Kill," which includes a catchy song called "Rock And Roll All Nite." But it isn't until that track's live version comes out later that year as the anchor of Kiss "Alive!" that the band has its first major hit.
1976: Kiss releases what is considered by many fans to be its best studio album, "Destroyer," which includes the orchestral ballad "Beth" that would, quite accidentally, become one of their biggest hits. "Beth" was the B-side of the hard-rocking single "Detroit Rock City," but radio disc jockeys began playing the ballad instead and it took off.
Peter Criss, Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, and Ace Frehley of Kiss at 'Kiss Concert' on July 25, 1979 at Madison Square Garden. (Photo by Robin Platzer/IMAGES/Getty Images)
1977: The band releases "Love Gun" and a second live album, "Alive II." The Gallup Poll names Kiss the most popular band in America. The band plays Madison Square Garden for the first time.
1978: In a move unheard of in the music industry, the four members release solo albums simultaneously, each selling over a million copies. But Frehley's is the only one to spawn a hit, with "New York Groove." NBC airs a two-hour TV movie starring the band, "Kiss Meets The Phantom Of The Park." Kiss floods the globe with band-themed merchandise far beyond the usual T-shirts and posters, including lunchboxes, vitamins, transistor radios, trading cards, and pinball machines. Later offerings include Kiss Kondoms and Kiss Kaskets.
1979: Kiss releases "Dynasty," with the disco-inspired "I Was Made For Lovin' You." By this point, their live show features Simmons seeming to fly into the air and land atop speakers above the stage, in addition to the usual fire-breathing and blood-spitting.
(L-R) Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley of the rock and roll band Kiss pose for a portrait for the cover of their self-entitled first album "Kiss" which was released on February 18, 1974. (Photo by Ginny Winn/Michael Ochs Archi
1980: They release the pop-y "Unmasked" and later hire drummer Eric Carr to replace Criss.
1981: The band releases "Music From The Elder," a concept album that evokes "Harry Potter" 20 years before that phenomenon began. But the album, with its medieval theme and departure from their typical musical style, does not appeal to many fans.
1982: Reacting to backlash against "The Elder," Kiss releases "Creatures Of The Night," a bombastic, drum-heavy masterpiece that remains one of its heaviest albums to date. Frehley is replaced by Vinnie Vincent on lead guitar.
Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Tommy Thayer, and Eric Singer of KISS visit the Empire State Building. (Photo by John Nacion/Getty Images)
1983: Deciding it's time to forsake the trademark makeup, Kiss reveals what they actually look like on an MTV special, timed to the release of the "Lick It Up" album. They remain without makeup until a 1996 reunion tour with the original members.
1984-1990: Kiss releases the albums "Animalize," "Asylum," "Crazy Nights" and "Hot In The Shade" as MTV embraces their new look. Guitarist Mark St. John replaces Vincent in 1984, but a painful nerve condition in his hands soon renders him unable to continue. He is replaced by Bruce Kulick.
1991: Carr dies of heart cancer.
1992: Eric Singer, a well-respected drummer for Alice Cooper, Black Sabbath, Badlands and Lita Ford, is hired, having toured with Paul Stanley's solo band in 1989. The band releases "Revenge," and records the album "Alive III" on that tour.
1995: The lineup — Stanley, Simmons, Kulick and Singer — is joined by Frehley and Criss during the taping of an MTV "Unplugged" show, telegraphing an upcoming reunion.
1996-1997: "Carnival Of Souls," a grunge-inspired album that had leaked and was already widely bootlegged, is officially released. The original members of Kiss reunite for what would become the top-grossing tour of the year.
1998: The reunited Kiss releases "Psycho Circus."
2000-2003: Kiss announces its first farewell tour. Soon after it ends, Stanley and Simmons change their minds. In 2002, Frehley is replaced by Tommy Thayer, a longtime band assistant. The band releases "Alive IV" with a symphony orchestra in 2003. Singer rejoins, cementing a lineup that has remained steady since then.
2009-2012: Kiss releases "Sonic Boom" and "Monster," their final studio albums. They begin a series of annual autumn "Kiss Kruises" with fans to tropical destinations.
2014: Kiss is inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but do not play at the ceremony.
2019: Kiss begins its "End Of The Road" tour, 19 years after its first "farewell" tour. Its final two shows are scheduled for Dec. 1 and 2 at Madison Square Garden, a five-minute subway ride from where they started.