Product Details
KISSology: The Ultimate Kiss Collection, Vol. 2: 1978-1991

KISSology: The Ultimate Kiss Collection, Vol. 2: 1978-1991
From Vh1 Classics

List Price: $34.98
Price: $22.49 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

24 new or used available from $17.49

Average customer review:

Product Description

Studio: Uni Dist Corp (music) Release Date: 09/07/2007


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13121 in DVD
  • Brand: KiSS
  • Released on: 2007-08-14
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Formats: Best of, Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD, Live, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 407 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
KISS have always had an approach to their fans that on the one hand could be seen as ridiculously crass and on the other as truly generous. And this release, with its three expertly mastered and crammed DVDs--issued with three separate bonus discs--could easily support either view. The second installment in KISS's Kissology DVD series will sort out the casual fans from the true members of the KISS Army. The material included here, after all, begins in 1978, when the band released four separate solo albums at once and their massive popularity began to wane. It continues on through the controversial makeup-free period and ends in '91, as KISS struggled to cope with the ascendancy of grunge over the hair metal style they'd experienced a second boom with. The concert films are pretty great, but the full-length Tom Snyder Tomorrow show appearance is flat-out brilliant, as is their live performance on the short-lived sketch comedy show Fridays. And the highlight of the set has to be the "European theatrical version" of their made-for-TV film KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park. All those who've suffered through poorly degenerated video bootlegs will glory at this wonderfully restored piece of rock and roll camp. --Mike McGonigal


Customer Reviews

Another great Volume of Kisstory5
The best part of this Volume II set is actually having all this stuff in one DVD package. Unfortunately I've seen everything here. I was hoping for a rare "Creatures Of The Night" concert. Rio is good but it lacks any rare songs and the show is so big the audio to me isn't as good as an Arena show would be, but I'll take it. The USA show "Night Flight" had a great special that I would like to have seen. Overall It's a DVD that no fan could pass up on. My only thing is most KISS fans have seen Largo '79 and I would liked to have seen something from the vaults that nobody has seen from the Dynasty tour. Just my opinion.

The Largo Bonus disc lacks "King Of The Nightime World" and the great Ace track "2,000 Man". I don't understand why that was left out.

Here is the latest listing I've found and hopefully is set:

Disc 1

* Land Of Hype And Glory with Edwin Newman - January 10, 1978
* The Tomorrow Show With Tom Snyder - October 31, 1979
* Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park European Theatrical Cut - 1979

Disc 2

* Shandi (music video) - 1980
* CNN Interview with Peter Criss - September 24, 1980
* Countdown - September 21, 1980
* Rockpop - September 13, 1980

1. "She's So European"
2. "Talk To Me"

* KISS Invades Australia - Sydney Showground: Sydney, Australia - November 22, 1980

1. "Detroit Rock City"
2. "Cold Gin"
3. "Strutter"
4. "Shandi"
5. "Calling Dr. Love"
6. "Firehouse"
7. "Talk To Me"
8. "Is That You"
9. "2000 Man"
10. "I Was Made For Lovin' You"
11. "New York Groove"
12. "Love Gun"
13. "God Of Thunder"
14. "Rock And Roll All Nite"
15. "Shout It Out Loud"
16. "King Of The Night Time World"
17. "Black Diamond"

* Fridays - January 15, 1982

1. "The Oath "
2. "A World Without Heroes"
3. "I"

* Top Pop - November 1982

1. "I Love It Loud"

Disc 3

* Maracana Stadium: Rio De Janeiro, Brazil July 18, 1983

1. "Creatures Of The Night"
2. "Cold Gin"
3. "Calling Dr. Love"
4. "Firehouse"
5. "I Love It Loud"
6. "War Machine"
7. "Black Diamond"
8. "Rock And Roll All Nite"

* MTV Special: KISS Unmasking -September 18, 1983
* Cascais Hall: Lisbon, Portugal - October 11, 1983

1. "Creatures Of The Night"
2. "Detroit Rock City"

* The Spectrum: Philadelphia, PA - December 18, 1987

1. "Love Gun"
2. "Bang Bang You"
3. "No, No, No"
4. "Crazy Crazy Nights"
5. "Reason To Live"

* The Palace At Auburn Hills: Detroit, MI - October 14, 1990

1. "I Stole Your Love"
2. "Deuce"
3. "Heaven's On Fire"
4. "Crazy Crazy Nights"
5. "Black Diamond"
6. "Shout It Out Loud"
7. "Strutter"
8. "Calling Dr. Love"
9. "I Was Made For Lovin' You"
10. "Fits Like A Glove"
11. "Hide Your Heart"
12. "Lick It Up"
13. "God Of Thunder"
14. "Forever"
15. "Cold Gin"
16. "Tears Are Falling"
17. "I Love It Loud"
18. "Love Gun"
19. "Detroit Rock City"
20. "I Want You"
21. "Rock And Roll All Nite"

* Music Video - 1991

1. "God Gave Rock `N' Roll To You II"

* Day In Rock - November 25, 1991: MTV News excerpt

Bonus Disc 1

Nippon Budokan- Tokyo, Japan April 21 1988

1. Love Gun
2. Cold Gin
3. Crazy Crazy Nights
4. Heaven's On Fire
5. War Machine
6. I Love It Loud
7. Lick It Up
8. I Was Made For Lovin' You
9. Detroit Rock City

Bonus Disc 2

Capital Center Largo, MD- July 8 1979

1. Radioactive
2. Move On
3. Calling Dr. Love
4. Firehouse
5. New York Groove
6. I Was Made For Lovin' You
7. Love Gun
8. Tossin' And Turnin'
9. God Of Thunder
10. Shout It Out Loud
11. Black Diamond
12. Detroit Rock City
13. Rock And Roll All Nite

Bonus Disc 3

The Ritz New York, NY- August 13 1988

1. Deuce
2. Love Gun
3. Fits Like A Glove
4. Heavens on Fire
5. Cold Gin
6. Black Diamond
7. Firehouse
8. Crazy, Crazy Nights
9. Calling Dr. Love
10. War Machine
11. Tears Are Falling

Solid Follow Up To Vol. 15
KISSology Vol. 1 was one of the greatest music DVD's ever released. A tremendous collection of great, vintage KISS concerts and TV apperances, KISSology really raised the bar when it comes to career retrospectives on DVD.

Now, KISS is releasing (or has released, depending on when you read this), the 2nd volume in the KISSology series, covering 1978-1991. It's got almost everything from that era that fans have wanted on DVD (almost, there are some exceptions) - The Land of Hype and Glory, The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder (Ace is a RIOT), Australia 1980, FRIDAYS (!!!), Brazil 1983, a couple songs from the first post-makeup concert, and a complete concert from one of their greatest tours ever - the Hot In The Shade tour! Leon Sphinx was pretty darned cool as the centerpiece, and the band was ON!

There are some other goodies, but the one I intentionally left out until now is KISS in ATTACK OF THE PHANTOMS - the European theatrical version of KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park. Supposedly there are scenes cut from the US version, and the score is different in parts as well. This will be a lot of fun to watch - as long as you "get it." It's a 70's campy TV movie, and for that time and genre it is a lot of fun.

The DVD ends with the passing of the great Eric Carr (I had the opportunity to meet him in 1990 - he truly was a great guy, and he is very much missed), leaving the Revenge era for Vol. 3.

Could there be more on there from the 80's? Animalize Live Uncensored is a glaring omission, as is anything from the entertaining Asylum tour, but this is still one heck of a tracklisting and another great release!

UPDATE: After watching the entire set a few things stand out. 1.) The Australia show from 1980 was fantastic. The band was MUCH tighter than the previous year on the Dynasty tour (I got each set, and after watching the Largo disc it was like night and day). 2.) The Brazil 1983 show was heavily edited by the TV network that aired it, and as such a few songs have been shortened in this presentation. 3.) They should have included more songs from the Philadelphia 1987 show. The band was ON, and it would have been nice to have more of this show. 4.) The 1990 Hot in the Shade show is edited. "Rise To It," is missing - they show the bluesy intro, but skip the song. WTF? Eric Carr's drum solo is also edited, but this is understandable - he sampled the intro to the Who's "Who Are You," and that becomes a rights issue. That part of the solo is gone. Interestingly enough, it was edited out so well that you wouldn't notice it isn't there if you didn't know. 5.) The Land of Hype and Glory is edited far too short, and the Tom Snyder appearance is cut in half (Space Bear is MIA).

But, keep in mind - everything that IS here is VERY cool. The footage from Fridays is pristine! The commentary throughout is very good as well, and even Bruce gets in on the commentary action! (Way to go Bruce!) The Detroit 1990 show is a great performance from a GREAT tour with a GREAT stage set. A tour that Paul and Gene still rank as one of their best ever. This set is a very, very solid continuation of what they started with Vol. 1. Could it have been better? Yes. But it is still a great set if you go by what is included rather than what is left out.

Also - ATTACK OF THE PHANTOMS is practically a different movie from Phantom of the Park. Previously unused scenes, extended scenes, music from the solo albums as part of the score, and a rearranged order of what happens in the movie. Some of these things are HUGELY positive (added scenes and dialogue is a big improvement), but some are detrimental (taking events out of order hurts the movie as some things make even LESS sense here). ATTACK is also in anamorphic widescreen, cropped from the original 4:3 TV format (although the cropping is usually done very well).

There is also a very reverential tone towards the late Eric Carr. Eric was a really, really nice guy. (Everyone who met him says that - I met him as well, and he was just REALLY nice and had no inflated "Rock Star Ego." In the commentary Paul hints at regrets at how things unfolded as Eric was dying in 1991. And watch through the credits at the end. In one way it's hard to watch this bonus, but in another it is a nice tribute - and a slight glimpse of Eric's sense of humor and how much he cared about the fans.)

Bottom line? If you're a serious fan, you've got to have it in your collection. If you're just a casual fan you should still get it since the price is right for what you get and the set is a lot of fun to watch.

Secure enough to admit I dig it!5
It seems to be incredibly hip for Kiss fans to turn up their noses at the band's glamour period - those years of "Kiss Meets the Phantom" and color coordinated costumes. But, hey, I don't mind saying I dug it then and I dig it now. It's campy and fun and who the heck cares? That's all that matters. Finally, after years of people like me who really ENJOYED Kiss in all their incarnations, this is a set of DVDs worth having.

I was thrilled with Kissology Volume One and was really looking forward to Vol. Two. I wasn't disappointed. A lot of Kiss fans (who consider themselves somehow "purists") might point to Vol. One as the superior collection. I beg to disagree. For one thing, this volume has a wider variety of songs, whereas Vol. One was basically the same numbers, performed almost identically, over several tours. An excellent collection, no doubt, but this set shows the band flexing their creative muscles and even getting a bit carried away.

The centerpiece of disc one is "Kiss in Attack of the Phantoms," the theatrical release of NBC's 1979 "Kiss Meets the Phantom." A few scenes that had gone unused in the U.S. tele-movie are here and I have to admit, this film is a riot. It's not Coppolla, but it ain't supposed to be! Come on, folks! We're talking about Kiss fighting robot monkey men in an amusement park! It's just fun. The real treat of this version of the movie is that much of the original music used in the American version has been replaced with songs from the solo albums. The effect is very retro, but very nice.

The complete concert from Sydney is just priceless. Seeing Eric Carr in action again is a moving experience. And the band, replete in all their "Xanadu" costumes, manage to rock every bit as hard as when they wore the more credible (?) black leather in the Cobo Hall in 1975.

A huge treat is the complete performances from ABC's short-lived "Fridays" show, the only known live performances of The Elder material. This whole DVD set is worth it just for Ace's guitar on "The Oath." The guy could burn back then, even as he made his exit from the band. I don't care how many concert T-Shirt-wearing-potbellied purists disagree, this stuff was good.

I would have liked to have seen more of the concert in Rio De Janeiro, from the "Creatures of the Night" tour, particularly Gene's bass solo. But that's nitpicking. The footage from the first non-make-up show in Lisbon is grainy - with an almost bootleg quality to it - but that only adds to the charm. And the full set from the "Hot in the Shade" Tour proves, I think, that Kiss are a group of stellar musicians with some seriously great music.

As a side note, if you are one of the lucky few to receive a copy with the bonus "1979 Largo" disc, you'll be happy to notice that the grainy footage (some of which is evident in previous compilations) has been somewhat cleaned up.

If you're a Kiss fan, buy this!! Buy it now!!