Friday, December 29, 2017

KISS - Indy Debut - 1973

In 1973 KISS released their debut album as a self financed independent release. Funded by manager Bill Aucoin who used the LP to secure a major label contract with newly formed Casablanca Records. The tracks were recorded quickly and cheaply at two different studios. They even included a live track recorded at an early gig. While the album didn't sell it did get them signed and they still play most of these songs live today. It was cleaned up some and repackaged for re-release in 1975 after the success of their double live LP Alive!

Side One
01 Strutter [Electric Lady]
02 Let Me Go Rock And Roll [Bell Sounds]
03 Firehouse [Bell Sounds]
04 Cold Gin [Electric Lady]
05 Let Me Know [Bell Sounds]

Side Two
01 Watchin You [Electric Lady]
02 Deuce [Electric Lady]
03 Acrobat [Live at The Daisy]
04 Black Diamond [Electric Lady]
05 100,000 Years [Bell Sounds]

Reality Notes

Things happened fast For KISS in 1973. Within a year after forming they had acquired a manager and a record contract with an up and coming label. Both helped to shape and mold them into the machine they became four years later. What if things did not move quite so fast? What if their debut album was an independent release? With the available demos we can construct what could have been that LP.

The tracks here were all recorded before their debut album. Five songs were recorded at Electric Lady by Eddie Kramer as payment for session work owed Gene and Paul. Four songs were recorded at Bell Sounds studios by Kerner and Wise who produced their major label debut and the follow up Hotter Than Hell. Acrobat was recorded live at an early gig at the Daisy, this song would become Love Theme From KISS after dropping the Much Too Young second half.

There are two songs from the first album that we do not have a demo for. Nothin' to Lose and Kissing Time. Kissing Time is a Bobby Rydel cover that was added to the second pressing of the first album. These two songs are replaced with two demos from the same sessions of songs that would later appear on the second album. You could take Nothin' to Lose and Kissing Time from the first album and move them to the second if you really wanted to.  

Watching You comes from the Eddie Kramer produced demos and Let Me Go Rock And Roll is from the Kerner and Wise produced Bell Sounds demos. It was standard practice for Kerner and Wise at the time to record pre-production demos in an independent studio. Their reasoning was to keep any unreleased songs out of the labels hands. It's not theirs if they didn't pay for it.

I basically used the first album as a template and substituted the HTH tracks where they were needed. I did switch the last two songs around simply because I wanted to. All songs were sourced from the 28 disc KISSTORY bootleg.

The cover features one of the earliest photos of the band in full makeup.

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