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Crazy Nights

Crazy Nights is the fourteenth studio album by American rock band Kiss, recorded from March to June 1987 and released on September 21, 1987,[5] by Mercury worldwide and Vertigo in the UK. This was the second album to feature the line-up of Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Bruce Kulick, and Eric Carr.[6] The album is notable for featuring heavy use of pop-metal keyboards and synthesizers.[7] It was re-released in 1998 as part of the Kiss Remasters series and is the last Kiss album to have been remastered.

Crazy Nights
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 21, 1987 (1987-09-21)
RecordedMarch–June 1987
Studio
  • Can-AM Recorders (Tarzana)
  • One on One (Hollywood)
  • Rumbo Recorders (Los Angeles)
Genre
Length42:58
LabelMercury
ProducerRon Nevison
Kiss chronology
Asylum
(1985)
Crazy Nights
(1987)
Chikara
(1988)
Singles from Crazy Nights
  1. "Crazy Crazy Nights"
    Released: August 18, 1987
  2. "Reason to Live"
    Released: November 1, 1987
  3. "Turn On the Night"
    Released: February 27, 1988

A relatively high number of songs from Crazy Nights were performed live during its supporting tour, but during and especially immediately following the tour, most of those songs were dropped and were never performed again. Only the song "Crazy Crazy Nights" was retained in their setlist for the Hot in the Shade Tour which followed a couple of years later; it was dropped after that tour and would not return for nearly 20 years until the Sonic Boom Over Europe Tour. This makes the album one of the least represented in the bands' entire catalog throughout their career in their setlists, behind only Music From "The Elder" and Carnival of Souls: The Final Sessions.

Composition and recording

Kiss took a different approach in creating Crazy Nights, to turn around their image after they had a downfall in their music career due to experimentation of the band's music genre and the loss of two prime members.[8] The band had a lot to prove after their decline of success. Since the time of recording Asylum, Kiss were also under new management representation with Larry Mazur, a consultant.[6]

After the Asylum Tour had ended, Kiss went on a couple of months hiatus due to Gene Simmons' career as an actor and a producer, which made the band seem like his side job instead of his primary job. For Kisstory, Paul Stanley stated that he got tired of Simmons's lack of commitment and one day told him:

We were in the parking lot one day, and I said to Gene, 'Look, you're off doing all these other things while still reaping the benefits of this band—and I'm getting screwed. It's not fair for me to put in this kind of time, while somebody else who is supposed to be my partner, is not.' And Gene looked at me and said,'That's fair.' I could have used Gene's input. But my attitude at that point was that I certainly wasn't going to listen to a guy who's off managing cabaret singers and producing five bands, while I was trying to make an album.[9]

Simmons' temporary departure gave space to Eric Carr and Bruce Kulick. Kulick had four co-writing credits and Carr one, but almost got other material on the album. Stanley had worked with Desmond Child, Diane Warren and Adam Mitchell and co-wrote songs: "Crazy Crazy Nights", "I'll Fight Hell to Hold You" and "When Your Walls Come Down" with Mitchell ("I'll Fight Hell to Hold You" and "When Your Walls Come Down" with Kulick), "Bang Bang You", "My Way" and "Reason to Live" with Child ("My Way" with Bruce Turgon also), and "Turn On the Night" was co-written by Stanley and Warren.

As Kiss' previous two albums had been self-produced, the band felt it needed to bring in an outside producer who would help the album achieve more commercial success. Producer Ron Nevison was hired to produce the album, but because of Nevison's filled schedule, the band had to wait for his schedule to clear. Nevison was chosen in part from his recent commercial success in producing platinum albums for Heart and Ozzy Osbourne. Simmons said for KISStory, "When we started working on Crazy Nights, we looked for someone else to pull the cart, another person to help guide the band... So we hooked up with a producer named Ron Nevison, who[m] Paul had wanted to work with for a while, although I never did."[9] In the "Crazy Nights, it's 25 years strong" KissFAQ interview, Nevison describes the efforts band members put into the album: “Well, this was the only album I did with them. I do know that Gene wasn’t there all the time. Obviously, Bruce was and, to some extent, Eric. Mostly, a majority of the work on that album I did with Bruce and Paul. The bass tracks were cut initially, and Gene was only needed for lead vocals. I must say that most of the time he was there, he was in the back of the studio reading Variety."[10] Although Simmons' participation was low for the album, he did contribute in providing Nevison with 20–25 songs that were potential material for the album, including one song called "I'm Going to Put a Log in Your Fire Place", which was ultimately not used on this or any subsequent albums.[10]

The album was at first called "Who Dares Wins", which was Carr's idea. According to him, "During a photo session, our wardrobe girl had this commando patch lying around with 'Who Dares Wins' on it, and I said, 'Hey, what a great idea for an album title!' Then she brought it over to Paul who said the same thing. We ended up not using it because it didn't look good in print, and it sounded as if no one would understand it."[9] The idea was dropped in June but managed to appear on some Japanese advertisements for the upcoming album. Another title the band thought of was "Condemnation", but as Stanley said, "Well, 'Condemnation' was never really the title. It was just a thought that passed through our minds and gave everyone a chuckle."[9] The recording sessions started in March at One on One Recording Studios in Canoga Park, California, but later continued at Rumbo Recorders, also in Canoga Park, and Can-Am Recorders in Tarzana, California. In June the album was completed, and it was mixed at Can-Am Recorders by Nevison, before being turned over to PolyGram in July.

In his 2014 biography Face the Music, Stanley claims that Carr had stopped speaking to him during the tour for Crazy Nights. Stanley eventually sat down with Carr and insisted that the "non-communicative bullshit" had to end, which it did. Stanley claimed that Carr had started to drink more and may have been doing drugs by the late 1980s, which may have been causing his unhappiness. Stanley also claimed that Carr had started to obsess over not being the original drummer for Kiss, which he said Carr also did during the 1980 Australia tour.[11]

Songs

"Crazy Crazy Nights"

"Crazy Crazy Nights" was the first single from the album and reached No. 65 on Billboard Hot 100 and No. 37 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks.[12] The song was a massive hit in the UK where it reached No. 4 and, to date, is Kiss' joint highest-charting single in the UK along with "God Gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II".[13] "Crazy Crazy Nights" also went into the Top 40 in Norway, the Netherlands and Australia.

"I'll Fight Hell to Hold You"

Adam Mitchell reportedly plays on the song along with Bruce Kulick.[14]

"Bang Bang You"

According to Paul Stanley, "Bang Bang You" is "the classic story of boys and their toys."[15]

"No, No, No"

"No, No, No", was originally titled "Assume the Position" and later "Down on All Fours". It was based on Kulick's riff which was originally engineered and mixed by Bruce's long time friend NYC Record Plant engineer Ira Hoch in Ira's home studio. The tracks consisted of a stereo drum mix lifted from a prior KISS album (originally played by Eric Carr), otherwise Bruce plays bass and all guitars with Ira doing the recording and stereo bounce from a 4 track Tascam 244 to a Teac 1/4" stereo reel to reel and back to the Tascam 244 to allow for the recording of two more guitar parts. The demo was then given to Gene Simmons, who wrote the lyrics. The song was released as the "B" side of the first single "Crazy Crazy Nights". It is Kulick's favorite song because "It's the fastest, ferocious thing, and it features me a lot."[16]

"Hell or High Water"

"Hell or High Water" is a song based on Kulick's idea and riff which he came up with during the Asylum Tour; Simmons wrote the lyrics.

"When Your Walls Come Down"

"When Your Walls Come Down" is another song based on Kulick's riff that he came up with during the Asylum Tour. Stanley had the chorus and with Mitchell's assistance, the song was finished.

"Reason to Live"

Stanley recalled when he played the "Reason to Live" demo to Simmons, "I remember calling up Gene and playing it to him down the phone... I played the song to Gene, and obviously, the bomb had gone off at the other end. He was speechless."[17] Stanley was always okay with having power ballads on Kiss albums, which first started with "I Still Love You" on Creatures of the Night. Stanley also said, "If a band was, to be honest, they would tell you that at that time, the only hope for airplay was a ballad."[17] A music video, directed by Marty Callner, was made and featured Playboy centerfold, Eloise Broady.[17] "Reason to Live" reached No. 64 Billboard Hot 100, No. 34 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks[12] and No. 33 in the UK.[13] The song also managed to chart in the Netherlands, reaching No. 89. The music video for the song was a big hit on MTV in early 1988, regularly appearing as the top requested video on Dial MTV.

"Good Girl Gone Bad"

"Good Girl Gone Bad" was written by Simmons, friend Davitt Sigerson, and his songwriting partner Peter Diggins, whom Simmons never met. The song was lyrically based on something obvious from Simmons's community college period: "A young lady who Gene went to college with, a girl who started out the demure virgin, all coy and unclaimed...then met up with 'The Tongue'! The only sad thing about the tale is that when she finally did give way, it was in the backseat of a car—and with someone else, a friend of Gene's, in fact."

"Turn On the Night"

"Turn On the Night" was the third single off the album. A music video directed by Marty Callner was made in Worcester, Massachusetts on January 27, 1988. "Turn On the Night" only charted in the UK, where it reached No. 41.[13]

"Thief in the Night"

"Thief in the Night" was first recorded by Wendy O. Williams on her 1984 solo album WOW.[18]

Unreleased songs

A few other songs were recorded for the album, but not included. Kulick, Child and Stanley wrote a song called "Sword and Stone" that did not manage to get on the album because Nevison was not thrilled with the song. Kulick later stated, "I just felt really bad that Ron Nevison didn't like the song 'cause then it would have been on Crazy Nights. But I couldn't control that. And the demo that is out there in bootleg form is pretty good. We did it at Electric Lady with Eric Carr, and it's a full-blown KISS track practically. I actually came up with that riff backstage on tour early on, Asylum, I think. That's what happens. Paul didn't mind as much; I felt pretty bad about that." The song was offered to Canadian rock band Loverboy, and was re-recorded by their lead guitarist Paul Dean on his 1988 album Hard Core. The song was also recorded by German heavy metal band Bonfire for a Wes Craven movie, Shocker.

Carr, Simmons and Mitchell wrote, "Dial 'L' for Love". Carr, who sang the song, was the primary writer, and he later passed it to Simmons and Mitchell who completed it. As Carr stated, "The song wasn't good at the time, so it didn't get on the album." A demo was made, but it did not include completed vocals. An instrumental recording of "Dial 'L' for Love" would be released on Unfinished Business in 2011.

"Are You Always This Hot" is a song written by Simmons and Mitchell and is unique because it has not yet been found in collector's circles nor re-recorded by another artist. In the 1980s, Simmons had the ritual of making new songs that are based on some older songs, or simply spoken, he recycled them. And "Are You Always This Hot" is one of them. It was first written by Mitchell in 1981. The song "Time Traveler" was recorded during these sessions and later released on the 2001 KISS Box Set. Some other songs that were written for the album, but never made it, are "Boomerang", "'X' Marks the Spot", "Scratch and Sniff", "What Goes Up", "Hunger for Love", "Dirty Blonde" and "No Mercy", although "Boomerang" would be later featured on Hot in the Shade.

Reception

"While their melodies continue to be quarried from stone, their lyrics are written in lipstick," wrote Emily Fraser in a three-star Q review. "The riffs often have purpose and force and, in the cases of 'No No No' and 'Thief in the Night', a keen, cutting edge."[23] "Not aesthetically wonderful," observed Fred Dellar in Hi-Fi News & Record Review, "but I wish I had shares in it."[22]

Crazy Nights peaked at No. 18 on the US Billboard 200 chart,[12] making it the highest-charting Kiss album of the 1980s in the US. It was certified platinum on November 18, 1987, in Canada[25] and a few months later in the US, on February 18, 1988.[26] All three singles off the album had corresponding videos that received heavy rotation on MTV, and were also featured on the Crazy Nights home video. The most successful single was "Crazy Crazy Nights", charting in five countries, and the least successful was "Turn On the Night", charting only in the UK.

The album was very well received by executives at Polygram Records. It was widely reported that during a meeting in which the album was played for them in full, the entire conference room reportedly stood and applauded for a full five minutes afterward. The excitement was enough for the corporate team to promote the album well past platinum status, cementing its reputation as one of the benchmarks of 1980's corporate rock.[27]

Track listing

All credits adapted from the original release.[28]

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
1."Crazy Crazy Nights"Paul Stanley, Adam MitchellStanley3:47
2."I'll Fight Hell to Hold You"Stanley, Mitchell, Bruce KulickStanley4:10
3."Bang Bang You"Stanley, Desmond ChildStanley3:53
4."No, No, No"Gene Simmons, Kulick, Eric CarrSimmons4:19
5."Hell or High Water"Simmons, KulickSimmons3:28
6."My Way"Stanley, Child, Bruce TurgonStanley3:58
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)Lead vocalsLength
7."When Your Walls Come Down"Stanley, Mitchell, KulickStanley3:25
8."Reason to Live"Stanley, ChildStanley4:00
9."Good Girl Gone Bad"Simmons, Davitt Sigerson, Peter DigginsSimmons4:35
10."Turn On the Night"Stanley, Diane WarrenStanley3:18
11."Thief in the Night"Simmons, Mitch WeissmanSimmons4:07

Personnel

Kiss
Additional musicians
  • Phil Ashley – keyboards
  • Tom Kelly – backing vocals
Production

Charts

Album

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada)[25] Platinum 100,000^
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[47] Gold 25,000[47]
United Kingdom (BPI)[48] Gold 100,000^
United States (RIAA)[26] Platinum 1,000,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

References

  1. ^ Rivadavia, Eduardo (August 2, 2016). "Kiss Albums Ranked". Loudwire. Retrieved April 9, 2021.
  2. ^ Everley, Dave (September 23, 2020). "Kiss: how their long-awaited reunion turned into a catastrophe". Classic Rock. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  3. ^ Peacock, Tim (August 25, 2020). "Best KISS Songs: 20 Essential Tracks To Rock And Roll All Nite". uDiscover Music. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  4. ^ Wilkening, Matthew (September 23, 2020). "10 Worst Kiss Songs". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved November 12, 2021.
  5. ^ "Crazy Nights released September 21, 1987". Crazy Nights release date - mentioned at 7.47. MTV. September 1987.
  6. ^ a b Simmons, Gene (December 11, 2001). Kiss and Make-up (1 ed.). New York City, New York: Crown Publishing Group. ISBN 978-060-9-60855-5.
  7. ^ "Kiss Albums Ranked Worst to Best". Ultimate Classic Rock. February 22, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2021.
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  9. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on January 30, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  10. ^ a b McPhate, Tim (January 30, 2012). "Crazy Nights, it's 25 years strong: Interview w/ Ron Nevison". Kiss Asylum. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
  11. ^ Stanley, Paul (April 8, 2014). Face the Music: A Life Exposed (1 ed.). New York City, New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-062-11406-8.
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  13. ^ a b c d e f "Kiss Official Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
  14. ^ . Kissfaq.com. Archived from the original on August 14, 2011. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  15. ^ . Kissfaq.com. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  16. ^ . Kissfaq.com. Archived from the original on June 15, 2011. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  17. ^ a b c . Kissfaq.com. Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved December 24, 2010.
  18. ^ Wendy O. Williams (1984). WOW (LP Sleeve). South Plainfield, NJ: Passport Records. PB 6034.
  19. ^ Prato, Greg. "Kiss - Crazy Nights review". AllMusic. Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  20. ^ Popoff, Martin (November 1, 2005). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 2: The Eighties. Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Collector's Guide Publishing. p. 188. ISBN 978-1-89-495931-5.
  21. ^ Larkin, Colin (2006). Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 4 (4 ed.). Muze. p. 875. ISBN 978-0-19-531373-4.
  22. ^ a b Dellar, Fred (February 1988). "Kiss: Crazy Nights" (PDF). Hi-Fi News & Record Review. Vol. 33, no. 2. pp. 113–114. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
  23. ^ a b Fraser, Emily (October 1987). "Kiss - Crazy Nights". Q. Vol. 2, no. 1.
  24. ^ Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian David (2004). . Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-0169-8. Archived from the original on June 27, 2011.
  25. ^ a b "Canadian album certifications – Kiss – Crazy Nights". Music Canada.
  26. ^ a b "American album certifications – Kiss – Crazy Nights". Recording Industry Association of America.
  27. ^ Leaf, David; Ken Sharp (2003). Kiss: Behind the Mask: The Official Authorized Biography. New York: Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-53073-5.
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  29. ^ "#KISS #WeAreStrongWithYou KISS.. | KISS Army | VK".
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  37. ^ "Swedishcharts.com – Kiss – Crazy Nights". Hung Medien. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
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  42. ^ "The Irish Charts: "Crazy Crazy Nights" -". Irish Charts.ie. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  43. ^ "Kiss – Crazy Crazy Nights". Dutch Charts (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
  44. ^ "Kiss – Crazy Crazy Nights". Ultratop (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
  45. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  46. ^ "Kiss – Reason to Live". Dutch Charts (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved July 27, 2022.
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  48. ^ "Bonhams : Kiss: A 'Gold' Award for the album Crazy Nights, 1987". December 20, 2020.

External links

  • Crazy Nights at Discogs (list of releases)

crazy, nights, other, uses, disambiguation, fourteenth, studio, album, american, rock, band, kiss, recorded, from, march, june, 1987, released, september, 1987, mercury, worldwide, vertigo, this, second, album, feature, line, gene, simmons, paul, stanley, bruc. For other uses see Crazy Nights disambiguation Crazy Nights is the fourteenth studio album by American rock band Kiss recorded from March to June 1987 and released on September 21 1987 5 by Mercury worldwide and Vertigo in the UK This was the second album to feature the line up of Gene Simmons Paul Stanley Bruce Kulick and Eric Carr 6 The album is notable for featuring heavy use of pop metal keyboards and synthesizers 7 It was re released in 1998 as part of the Kiss Remasters series and is the last Kiss album to have been remastered Crazy NightsStudio album by KissReleasedSeptember 21 1987 1987 09 21 RecordedMarch June 1987StudioCan AM Recorders Tarzana One on One Hollywood Rumbo Recorders Los Angeles GenreGlam metal 1 2 3 pop rock 4 Length42 58LabelMercuryProducerRon NevisonKiss chronologyAsylum 1985 Crazy Nights 1987 Chikara 1988 Singles from Crazy Nights Crazy Crazy Nights Released August 18 1987 Reason to Live Released November 1 1987 Turn On the Night Released February 27 1988A relatively high number of songs from Crazy Nights were performed live during its supporting tour but during and especially immediately following the tour most of those songs were dropped and were never performed again Only the song Crazy Crazy Nights was retained in their setlist for the Hot in the Shade Tour which followed a couple of years later it was dropped after that tour and would not return for nearly 20 years until the Sonic Boom Over Europe Tour This makes the album one of the least represented in the bands entire catalog throughout their career in their setlists behind only Music From The Elder and Carnival of Souls The Final Sessions Contents 1 Composition and recording 2 Songs 3 Unreleased songs 4 Reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 7 Charts 7 1 Album 7 2 Singles 8 Certifications 9 References 10 External linksComposition and recording EditKiss took a different approach in creating Crazy Nights to turn around their image after they had a downfall in their music career due to experimentation of the band s music genre and the loss of two prime members 8 The band had a lot to prove after their decline of success Since the time of recording Asylum Kiss were also under new management representation with Larry Mazur a consultant 6 After the Asylum Tour had ended Kiss went on a couple of months hiatus due to Gene Simmons career as an actor and a producer which made the band seem like his side job instead of his primary job For Kisstory Paul Stanley stated that he got tired of Simmons s lack of commitment and one day told him We were in the parking lot one day and I said to Gene Look you re off doing all these other things while still reaping the benefits of this band and I m getting screwed It s not fair for me to put in this kind of time while somebody else who is supposed to be my partner is not And Gene looked at me and said That s fair I could have used Gene s input But my attitude at that point was that I certainly wasn t going to listen to a guy who s off managing cabaret singers and producing five bands while I was trying to make an album 9 Simmons temporary departure gave space to Eric Carr and Bruce Kulick Kulick had four co writing credits and Carr one but almost got other material on the album Stanley had worked with Desmond Child Diane Warren and Adam Mitchell and co wrote songs Crazy Crazy Nights I ll Fight Hell to Hold You and When Your Walls Come Down with Mitchell I ll Fight Hell to Hold You and When Your Walls Come Down with Kulick Bang Bang You My Way and Reason to Live with Child My Way with Bruce Turgon also and Turn On the Night was co written by Stanley and Warren As Kiss previous two albums had been self produced the band felt it needed to bring in an outside producer who would help the album achieve more commercial success Producer Ron Nevison was hired to produce the album but because of Nevison s filled schedule the band had to wait for his schedule to clear Nevison was chosen in part from his recent commercial success in producing platinum albums for Heart and Ozzy Osbourne Simmons said for KISStory When we started working on Crazy Nights we looked for someone else to pull the cart another person to help guide the band So we hooked up with a producer named Ron Nevison who m Paul had wanted to work with for a while although I never did 9 In the Crazy Nights it s 25 years strong KissFAQ interview Nevison describes the efforts band members put into the album Well this was the only album I did with them I do know that Gene wasn t there all the time Obviously Bruce was and to some extent Eric Mostly a majority of the work on that album I did with Bruce and Paul The bass tracks were cut initially and Gene was only needed for lead vocals I must say that most of the time he was there he was in the back of the studio reading Variety 10 Although Simmons participation was low for the album he did contribute in providing Nevison with 20 25 songs that were potential material for the album including one song called I m Going to Put a Log in Your Fire Place which was ultimately not used on this or any subsequent albums 10 The album was at first called Who Dares Wins which was Carr s idea According to him During a photo session our wardrobe girl had this commando patch lying around with Who Dares Wins on it and I said Hey what a great idea for an album title Then she brought it over to Paul who said the same thing We ended up not using it because it didn t look good in print and it sounded as if no one would understand it 9 The idea was dropped in June but managed to appear on some Japanese advertisements for the upcoming album Another title the band thought of was Condemnation but as Stanley said Well Condemnation was never really the title It was just a thought that passed through our minds and gave everyone a chuckle 9 The recording sessions started in March at One on One Recording Studios in Canoga Park California but later continued at Rumbo Recorders also in Canoga Park and Can Am Recorders in Tarzana California In June the album was completed and it was mixed at Can Am Recorders by Nevison before being turned over to PolyGram in July In his 2014 biography Face the Music Stanley claims that Carr had stopped speaking to him during the tour for Crazy Nights Stanley eventually sat down with Carr and insisted that the non communicative bullshit had to end which it did Stanley claimed that Carr had started to drink more and may have been doing drugs by the late 1980s which may have been causing his unhappiness Stanley also claimed that Carr had started to obsess over not being the original drummer for Kiss which he said Carr also did during the 1980 Australia tour 11 Songs Edit Crazy Crazy Nights Crazy Crazy Nights was the first single from the album and reached No 65 on Billboard Hot 100 and No 37 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks 12 The song was a massive hit in the UK where it reached No 4 and to date is Kiss joint highest charting single in the UK along with God Gave Rock n Roll to You II 13 Crazy Crazy Nights also went into the Top 40 in Norway the Netherlands and Australia I ll Fight Hell to Hold You Adam Mitchell reportedly plays on the song along with Bruce Kulick 14 Bang Bang You According to Paul Stanley Bang Bang You is the classic story of boys and their toys 15 No No No No No No was originally titled Assume the Position and later Down on All Fours It was based on Kulick s riff which was originally engineered and mixed by Bruce s long time friend NYC Record Plant engineer Ira Hoch in Ira s home studio The tracks consisted of a stereo drum mix lifted from a prior KISS album originally played by Eric Carr otherwise Bruce plays bass and all guitars with Ira doing the recording and stereo bounce from a 4 track Tascam 244 to a Teac 1 4 stereo reel to reel and back to the Tascam 244 to allow for the recording of two more guitar parts The demo was then given to Gene Simmons who wrote the lyrics The song was released as the B side of the first single Crazy Crazy Nights It is Kulick s favorite song because It s the fastest ferocious thing and it features me a lot 16 Hell or High Water Hell or High Water is a song based on Kulick s idea and riff which he came up with during the Asylum Tour Simmons wrote the lyrics When Your Walls Come Down When Your Walls Come Down is another song based on Kulick s riff that he came up with during the Asylum Tour Stanley had the chorus and with Mitchell s assistance the song was finished Reason to Live Stanley recalled when he played the Reason to Live demo to Simmons I remember calling up Gene and playing it to him down the phone I played the song to Gene and obviously the bomb had gone off at the other end He was speechless 17 Stanley was always okay with having power ballads on Kiss albums which first started with I Still Love You on Creatures of the Night Stanley also said If a band was to be honest they would tell you that at that time the only hope for airplay was a ballad 17 A music video directed by Marty Callner was made and featured Playboy centerfold Eloise Broady 17 Reason to Live reached No 64 Billboard Hot 100 No 34 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks 12 and No 33 in the UK 13 The song also managed to chart in the Netherlands reaching No 89 The music video for the song was a big hit on MTV in early 1988 regularly appearing as the top requested video on Dial MTV Good Girl Gone Bad Good Girl Gone Bad was written by Simmons friend Davitt Sigerson and his songwriting partner Peter Diggins whom Simmons never met The song was lyrically based on something obvious from Simmons s community college period A young lady who Gene went to college with a girl who started out the demure virgin all coy and unclaimed then met up with The Tongue The only sad thing about the tale is that when she finally did give way it was in the backseat of a car and with someone else a friend of Gene s in fact Turn On the Night Turn On the Night was the third single off the album A music video directed by Marty Callner was made in Worcester Massachusetts on January 27 1988 Turn On the Night only charted in the UK where it reached No 41 13 Thief in the Night Thief in the Night was first recorded by Wendy O Williams on her 1984 solo album WOW 18 Unreleased songs EditA few other songs were recorded for the album but not included Kulick Child and Stanley wrote a song called Sword and Stone that did not manage to get on the album because Nevison was not thrilled with the song Kulick later stated I just felt really bad that Ron Nevison didn t like the song cause then it would have been on Crazy Nights But I couldn t control that And the demo that is out there in bootleg form is pretty good We did it at Electric Lady with Eric Carr and it s a full blown KISS track practically I actually came up with that riff backstage on tour early on Asylum I think That s what happens Paul didn t mind as much I felt pretty bad about that The song was offered to Canadian rock band Loverboy and was re recorded by their lead guitarist Paul Dean on his 1988 album Hard Core The song was also recorded by German heavy metal band Bonfire for a Wes Craven movie Shocker Carr Simmons and Mitchell wrote Dial L for Love Carr who sang the song was the primary writer and he later passed it to Simmons and Mitchell who completed it As Carr stated The song wasn t good at the time so it didn t get on the album A demo was made but it did not include completed vocals An instrumental recording of Dial L for Love would be released on Unfinished Business in 2011 Are You Always This Hot is a song written by Simmons and Mitchell and is unique because it has not yet been found in collector s circles nor re recorded by another artist In the 1980s Simmons had the ritual of making new songs that are based on some older songs or simply spoken he recycled them And Are You Always This Hot is one of them It was first written by Mitchell in 1981 The song Time Traveler was recorded during these sessions and later released on the 2001 KISS Box Set Some other songs that were written for the album but never made it are Boomerang X Marks the Spot Scratch and Sniff What Goes Up Hunger for Love Dirty Blonde and No Mercy although Boomerang would be later featured on Hot in the Shade Reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 19 Collector s Guide to Heavy Metal3 10 20 Encyclopedia of Popular Music 21 Hi Fi News amp Record ReviewA 2 22 Q 23 The Rolling Stone Album Guide 24 While their melodies continue to be quarried from stone their lyrics are written in lipstick wrote Emily Fraser in a three star Q review The riffs often have purpose and force and in the cases of No No No and Thief in the Night a keen cutting edge 23 Not aesthetically wonderful observed Fred Dellar in Hi Fi News amp Record Review but I wish I had shares in it 22 Crazy Nights peaked at No 18 on the US Billboard 200 chart 12 making it the highest charting Kiss album of the 1980s in the US It was certified platinum on November 18 1987 in Canada 25 and a few months later in the US on February 18 1988 26 All three singles off the album had corresponding videos that received heavy rotation on MTV and were also featured on the Crazy Nights home video The most successful single was Crazy Crazy Nights charting in five countries and the least successful was Turn On the Night charting only in the UK The album was very well received by executives at Polygram Records It was widely reported that during a meeting in which the album was played for them in full the entire conference room reportedly stood and applauded for a full five minutes afterward The excitement was enough for the corporate team to promote the album well past platinum status cementing its reputation as one of the benchmarks of 1980 s corporate rock 27 Track listing EditAll credits adapted from the original release 28 Side oneNo TitleWriter s Lead vocalsLength1 Crazy Crazy Nights Paul Stanley Adam MitchellStanley3 472 I ll Fight Hell to Hold You Stanley Mitchell Bruce KulickStanley4 103 Bang Bang You Stanley Desmond ChildStanley3 534 No No No Gene Simmons Kulick Eric CarrSimmons4 195 Hell or High Water Simmons KulickSimmons3 286 My Way Stanley Child Bruce TurgonStanley3 58 Side twoNo TitleWriter s Lead vocalsLength7 When Your Walls Come Down Stanley Mitchell KulickStanley3 258 Reason to Live Stanley ChildStanley4 009 Good Girl Gone Bad Simmons Davitt Sigerson Peter DigginsSimmons4 3510 Turn On the Night Stanley Diane WarrenStanley3 1811 Thief in the Night Simmons Mitch WeissmanSimmons4 07Personnel EditKissPaul Stanley vocals rhythm guitar keyboards Gene Simmons bass guitar vocals Eric Carr drums percussion backing vocals Bruce Kulick lead guitar all guitars on No No No 29 bass guitar on Hell or High Water backing vocalsAdditional musiciansPhil Ashley keyboards Tom Kelly backing vocalsProductionRon Nevison producer engineer Toby Wright Julian Stoll Stan Katayama Jeff Poe assistant engineers Ted Jensen mastering at Sterling Sound New York Diandre Miller producer assistantCharts EditAlbum Edit Chart 1987 PeakpositionAustralian Albums Kent Music Report 30 24Canada Top Albums CDs RPM 31 21Dutch Albums Album Top 100 32 44Finnish Albums The Official Finnish Charts 33 4German Albums Offizielle Top 100 34 44Japanese Albums Oricon 35 21Norwegian Albums VG lista 36 8Swedish Albums Sverigetopplistan 37 11Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 38 14UK Albums OCC 39 4US Billboard 200 40 18 Singles Edit Year Single Chart Position1987 Crazy Crazy Nights UK Singles Chart 13 4Norwegian Singles Chart 41 7Irish Singles Chart 42 9Dutch MegaCharts 43 28Belgian Ultratop Wallonia 44 31Australian Singles Chart 45 34Billboard Mainstream Rock US 12 37Billboard Hot 100 US 12 65 Reason to Live UK Singles Chart 13 33Billboard Mainstream Rock US 12 341988 Billboard Hot 100 US 12 64Dutch MegaCharts 46 89 Turn On the Night UK Singles Chart 13 41Certifications EditRegion Certification Certified units salesCanada Music Canada 25 Platinum 100 000 Finland Musiikkituottajat 47 Gold 25 000 47 United Kingdom BPI 48 Gold 100 000 United States RIAA 26 Platinum 1 000 000 Shipments figures based on certification alone References Edit Rivadavia Eduardo August 2 2016 Kiss Albums Ranked Loudwire Retrieved April 9 2021 Everley Dave September 23 2020 Kiss how their long awaited reunion turned into a catastrophe Classic Rock Retrieved April 10 2021 Peacock Tim August 25 2020 Best KISS Songs 20 Essential Tracks To Rock And Roll All Nite uDiscover Music Retrieved April 10 2021 Wilkening Matthew September 23 2020 10 Worst Kiss Songs Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved November 12 2021 Crazy Nights released September 21 1987 Crazy Nights release date mentioned at 7 47 MTV September 1987 a b Simmons Gene December 11 2001 Kiss and Make up 1 ed New York City New York Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 060 9 60855 5 Kiss Albums Ranked Worst to Best Ultimate Classic Rock February 22 2016 Retrieved April 9 2021 Whitaker Sterling September 18 2015 When Kiss Broke Out the Synths on Crazy Nights Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved October 30 2013 a b c d Crazy Nights story Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved December 24 2010 a b McPhate Tim January 30 2012 Crazy Nights it s 25 years strong Interview w Ron Nevison Kiss Asylum Retrieved October 30 2013 Stanley Paul April 8 2014 Face the Music A Life Exposed 1 ed New York City New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 062 11406 8 a b c d e f g Kiss Chart History Billboard Retrieved February 3 2022 a b c d e f Kiss Official Chart History Official Charts Company Retrieved July 27 2022 I ll Fight Hell To Hold You info Kissfaq com Archived from the original on August 14 2011 Retrieved December 24 2010 Bang Bang You info Kissfaq com Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved December 24 2010 No No No info Kissfaq com Archived from the original on June 15 2011 Retrieved December 24 2010 a b c Reason to Live info Kissfaq com Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved December 24 2010 Wendy O Williams 1984 WOW LP Sleeve South Plainfield NJ Passport Records PB 6034 Prato Greg Kiss Crazy Nights review AllMusic Retrieved August 8 2021 Popoff Martin November 1 2005 The Collector s Guide to Heavy Metal Volume 2 The Eighties Burlington Ontario Canada Collector s Guide Publishing p 188 ISBN 978 1 89 495931 5 Larkin Colin 2006 Encyclopedia of Popular Music Vol 4 4 ed Muze p 875 ISBN 978 0 19 531373 4 a b Dellar Fred February 1988 Kiss Crazy Nights PDF Hi Fi News amp Record Review Vol 33 no 2 pp 113 114 Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Fraser Emily October 1987 Kiss Crazy Nights Q Vol 2 no 1 Brackett Nathan Hoard Christian David 2004 The New Rolling Stone Album Guide Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 0169 8 Archived from the original on June 27 2011 a b Canadian album certifications Kiss Crazy Nights Music Canada a b American album certifications Kiss Crazy Nights Recording Industry Association of America Leaf David Ken Sharp 2003 Kiss Behind the Mask The Official Authorized Biography New York Warner Books ISBN 0 446 53073 5 Kiss 1987 Crazy Nights LP Sleeve New York City New York Mercury Records 832 626 1 KISS WeAreStrongWithYou KISS KISS Army VK Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Top RPM Albums Issue 0901 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved April 2 2019 Dutchcharts nl Kiss Crazy Nights in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved April 2 2019 Pennanen Timo 2006 Sisaltaa hitin levyt ja esittajat Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972 in Finnish 1st ed Helsinki Kustannusosakeyhtio Otava p 166 ISBN 978 951 1 21053 5 Offiziellecharts de Kiss Crazy Nights in German GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved April 2 2019 Oricon Album Chart Book Complete Edition 1970 2005 in Japanese Roppongi Tokyo Oricon Entertainment 2006 ISBN 4 87131 077 9 Norwegiancharts com Kiss Crazy Nights Hung Medien Retrieved April 2 2019 Swedishcharts com Kiss Crazy Nights Hung Medien Retrieved April 2 2019 Swisscharts com Kiss Crazy Nights Hung Medien Retrieved April 2 2019 Kiss Artist Official Charts UK Albums Chart Retrieved April 22 2018 Kiss Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved April 2 2019 Kiss Crazy Crazy Nights Song Norwegiancharts com Hung Medien Retrieved July 27 2022 The Irish Charts Crazy Crazy Nights Irish Charts ie Retrieved August 22 2022 Kiss Crazy Crazy Nights Dutch Charts in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved July 27 2022 Kiss Crazy Crazy Nights Ultratop in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved July 27 2022 Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book ISBN 0 646 11917 6 Kiss Reason to Live Dutch Charts in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved July 27 2022 a b Kiss in Finnish Musiikkituottajat IFPI Finland Bonhams Kiss A Gold Award for the album Crazy Nights 1987 December 20 2020 External links EditCrazy Nights at Discogs list of releases Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crazy Nights amp oldid 1136051293, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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