I was never much of a Kiss fan – too much packaging and not enough
content for my taste – but that didn’t mean I didn’t write about them when I
lived in New York. This was taken sometime in early 1976 when I interviewed them one afternoon during a photo session in the photographer Finn
Costello’s studio, hence the costumes and full slap. They wore massive
stack-heeled boots and shoulder pads which is why I look so tiny. The photo
shoot also involved some big motor-bikes and a model, a tiny blonde girl in a
skimpy white dress, and I guess the concept was to contrast her purity with
Kiss’ wickedness. I haven’t seen any shots from that session for ages which
suggests they’ve been withdrawn, probably for the sake of political correctness
though this never seems to have been an issue that ever troubled Gene Simmons.
I also interviewed their
manager Bill Aucoin, a very clever man with a background not in music but in
marketing. Hanging from a big frame in his office were beautifully crafted
metre-high marionettes of the four Kiss guys, possibly a subliminal message to
visitors about who pulled the strings in their manager-client relationship. After
the interview I recall suggesting to him that because the group was never seen (or
photographed) out of character he could have more than one Kiss group operating
at the same time, in different parts of the world, like a franchise, assuming
he could recruit musicians of similar build, and no one would know the
difference. He thought about this idea for a while then dismissed it – but I
think I’d inadvertently invented the concept of tribute bands.
The members of Kiss
were often seen out of make-up in clubs in downtown Manhattan but there seems to
have been a tacit understanding on the part of photographers not to take their
pictures. I can’t see that happening now.
A few years ago I
was offered the rights to publish an ‘authorised’ Kiss photo book, but the
asking price was somewhere in the region of $100,000. I passed. Omnibus once
did 32-page ‘unauthorised’ photo book on them with a pull-out poster and we inadvertently included a photo of ‘Gene Simmons’ which was not actually him but a bloke in
identical make-up from a tribute band. Easy mistake to make in my opinion…
The "chopper" session by Fin Costello with Playboy Playmate Star Stowe. If you're interested the pics are posted here http://goo.gl/aWLCEu about half way down the page.
ReplyDeleteCREEM actually did publish non makeup pics of the band in 1975 before anybody cared. The guys naively posed and were casual about CREEM taking the pics but when Aucoin heard about it he flipped. KISS guarded their image tightly after that.
Yes, those are the ones, and that's the girl. It got a bit steamy watching the Kiss boys and her with that dress riding up her legs. I had to have a cold shower when I got home :-)
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