Gene Simmons is the first solo album by Gene Simmons, the bassist and co-lead vocalist of the hard rock band Kiss. It is one of four solo albums released by each member of Kiss, but yet still under the Kiss label, coming out alongside Peter Criss, Ace Frehley, and Paul Stanley. It was released on September 18, 1978. Reaching number 22 on the US Billboard 200 albums chart, it was the highest-placing of all the four Kiss solo albums. Mainly a hard rock style album, it also features choirs and string arrangements on some songs, as well as incorporating various musical genres including Beatles-inspired pop, 1970s funk, and rock and roll. Simmons said that he covered "When You Wish Upon a Star" because he related to the song and was a fan of Disney movies. "When I first heard that song I could barely speak English but I knew the words were true. Anybody can have what they want, the world and life can give its rewards to anyone".
The songs "Burning Up with Fever", "Man of 1000 Faces" and "True Confessions" were demoed in August 1975 for the Destroyer album, but rejected by producer Bob Ezrin. They were finally released in 2021 on the bonus disc in the 2CD and Superdeluxe box set versions of Destroyer. "See You Tonite", based on an acoustic Wicked Lester demo from August 1971, was also demoed in 1975, and the demo versions of all four songs are on the Gene Simmons Vault box set, along with a 1976 demo of "Mr. Make Believe"
On the original CD release in 1988 the first two songs are split incorrectly. The introduction that leads into "Radioactive" is split at the 51-second mark while the rest of "Radioactive" and all of "Burning Up with Fever" are played in the second track. However, the track listing of the cover lists the two songs as two separate tracks. The rest of the CD is split correctly. The 1997 remastered edition fixes this mistake with "Radioactive" and "Burning Up with Fever" being split as two separate tracks. The introduction played before "Radioactive" is left in as part of the song.
Reception
The album reached number 22 on the US Billboard 200 albums chart, making it the highest-placing of all the four Kiss solo albums of 1978. It was certified platinum on October 2, 1978, having shipped 1,000,000 copies.
AllMusic gave the album 3 stars out of 5 and called it an "unpredictable yet ultimately enjoyable release."
Personnel
- Gene Simmons – vocals, guitar, bass
Additional personnel
- Neil Jason – bass
- Elliot Randall – guitars
- Allan Schwartzberg – drums
- Sean Delaney – percussion, backing vocals
- Ron Frangipane – symphonic arrangements and conductor of Members of the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestras
- Gordon Grody, Diva Gray, Kate Sagal, Franny Eisenberg, Carolyn Ray – backing vocals
- Eric Troyer – piano and vocals on "Radioactive" & "Living in Sin"
- Steve Lacey – guitars on "Radioactive"
- John Shane Howell – classical guitar, segue between "Radioactive" & "Burning Up with Fever"
- Richard Gerstein – piano on "True Confessions" & "Always Near You / Nowhere to Hide"
- Joe Perry – guitars on "Radioactive" & "Tunnel of Love"
- Bob Seger – backing vocals on "Radioactive" & "Living in Sin"
- Rick Nielsen – guitars on "See You in Your Dreams"
- Helen Reddy – background vocals on "True Confessions"
- Jeff "Skunk" Baxter – guitars on "Burning Up with Fever", "See You Tonite", "Tunnel of Love" & "Mr. Make Believe"
- Donna Summer – background vocals on "Burning Up with Fever," & "Tunnel of Love"
- Janis Ian – backing vocals on the "Prelude to Radioactive"
- Cher – spoken word phone call on "Living in Sin"
- Mitch Weissman & Joe Pecorino (Beatlemania) – backing vocals on "Mr. Make Believe", "See You Tonite" & "Always Near You / Nowhere to Hide"
- Michael Des Barres – background vocals on "See You in Your Dreams"
- Richie Ranno – guitars on "Tunnel of Love"
- The Citrus College Singers – chorus on "True Confessions" & "Always Near You / Nowhere to Hide"
Production
- Gene Simmons – co–producer
- Sean Delaney – co–producer
- George Marino – mastering
- Eraldo Carugati – album cover
Charts
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|-
! scope="col"| Chart (1978–1979)
! scope="col"| Peak<br />position
|-
! scope="row"| Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)
| align="center"| 32
|-
|-
!scope="row"|Japanese Albums (Oricon)
| align="center"| 24
|-
|}
Certifications
References
Footnotes
Citations
External links
- KISSONLINE.COM Discography- Gene Simmons, Accessed on July 28, 2008.
