Description
Check exclusive video showing the LP for sale!
Check exclusive video showing the LP for sale!
Listen to the C.N song playing on a turntable:
Kiss – Crazy Nights
Label: Mercury – 422 832 626-1 Q-1, Mercury – R150311
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Club Edition
Country: US
Released: 1987
Style: Hard Rock, Glam
A1 Crazy Crazy Nights
A2 I’ll Fight Hell To Hold You
A3 Bang Bang You
A4 No, No, No
A5 Hell Or High Water
A6 My Way
B1 When Your Walls Come Down
B2 Reason To Live
B3 Good Girl Gone Bad
B4 Turn Of The Night
B5 Thief In The Night
Licensed From – PolyGram Records, Inc.
Distributed By – BMG Direct Marketing, Inc. – R-150311
Bass – Gene Simmons
Drums – Eric Carr
Guitar – Bruce Kulick
Guitar, Keyboards – Paul Stanley
Keyboards – Phil Ashley
Producer, Engineer – Ron Nevison
Vocals [Background, Additional] – Tom Kelly
Dist. under license from Polygram Records. Inc. by BMG Direct Marketing
KISS April 16, 1988 opened their Crazy Nights Japanese tour at Rainbow Hall in Nagoya
We are now in 1987 in the Kiss timeline and something odd has happened. For the first time in Kisstory, Kiss did not release an album in a given year. 1986 did not see a Kiss studio album release. For a band that started out doing 2 a year and then one a year, it is a huge surprise that 1986 saw nothing. Not even a greatest hits package. After the Asylum Tour ended, Kiss took a break as they had been going strong for 12 years non-stop. Gene went off and produced other albums such as Black N’ Blue and Paul, well Paul was left trying to keep Kiss alive (no pun intended).
By this time, Paul was pretty sick of Gene’s lack of commitment and confronted Gene about. He told Gene that it wasn’t fair that he was off doing all these side projects while reaping the benefits of Kiss thanks to Paul doing all the work and heavy lifting and you know, Paul is right. Paul was the one to save Kiss and keep the wheel’s turning. I don’t know how much that worked, because Gene’s input on this album is still pretty minimal with only 4 of the 11 songs on the album. Heck, Bruce had 4 writing credits on this album and Eric had one. Paul brought in some of the same people to help write the album including Adam Mitchell, Desmond Child and even Diane Warren. The band took on a more pop, radio-friendly sound with this one and saw them use synthesizers a great deal more with Paul, Bruce and Phil Ashley helping out on that instrument. The one cool thing about the album is that the line-up is unchanged from ‘Asylum’. Kiss saw no turnover this time around and this band would stay together for at least one more album.
I did see this show in concert back on February 10, 1998 with the Motor City Madman himself, Ted Nugent, opening for Kiss. I loved Ted as a younger lad with “Cat Scratch Fever” and to see him live was awesome. The man is a maniac and was a blast. Kiss was great too, but this a much more streamlined Kiss show. Not as much pyro, no Gene spitting fire, it was a standard rock show.
Kiss’ original masks may have been long gone, but their Aug. 18, 1987, single “Crazy Crazy Nights” seemed to suggest the band was trying on a new one.
Written by Paul Stanley with assistance from co-writer Adam Mitchell, this song was a clear attempt to emulate the success of newer rock heroes Bon Jovi and their ilk – groups that Kiss had in some cases influenced. The result was a slightly undignified feedback loop.
Not to say “Crazy Crazy Nights” was a bad pop-rock song. It was just an any-band-of-the-time song, and that wasn’t what Kiss fans expected. It all sounded clean, clear and poppy, but it didn’t sound like Kiss.
Yet Stanley and fellow Kiss mastermind Gene Simmons charged gamely ahead.
“‘Crazy Crazy Nights’ is basically just an extension of what we’ve been doing all along, which is preaching – yes, folks, we preach, but we preach about having a good time,” Stanley said in a backstage interview at the time. The spirit of the track, he added, was about escaping from the workaday prison by partying all night: “If you hate yourself in the morning, sleep late.”
Their change in musical direction was subsequently blamed on Simmons’ growing interest in a fledgling acting career while recording commenced on the single’s parent album, Crazy Nights. New producer Ron Nevison stepped into the creative void, having already moved Ozzy Osbourne and Heart toward more contemporary sounds – and big chart successes.
“Paul, to my recollection, wanted to make a different kind of album,” Nevison told KissFaq (as seen on KissConcertHistory) in 2012. “You know, with the success that Bon Jovi was having in writing with Desmond Child and other bands – I had taken Ozzy down that road with his first hit single in years, if ever, ‘Shot in the Dark,’ in 1986. And, of course, Heart.”
Simmons referenced some “false starts” as sessions stretched into two years. Nevison confirmed that Simmons arrived with 20 songs, but wasn’t active in what followed.
Meanwhile, Stanley was closely following Bon Jovi’s success with songs like “Livin’ on a Prayer,” which was great news for Nevison. “I wanted to get Kiss that same level of – you know, instead of selling 500,000 to 700,000 records, which is respectable, especially these days – I wanted it to be bigger than that,” he added. In keeping, Nevison was perfectly content with Stanley’s new tendency toward synth-based ideas. “You know, Gene’s stuff was Gene’s stuff,” he said. “Gene wrote rock stuff … not commercial really, but Kiss fans love Gene’s songs.”
Stanley’s transformation was completed with a notable shift in his singing style. “I actually wasn’t that happy with all the keys that Paul chose,” Nevison admitted. “He wanted to sing it as high as he could sing it – especially ‘Crazy Crazy Nights,’ with the modulation. He got up there, and there was no Auto-Tune. He wanted it like that and the songs were written like that and demoed like that. That’s the way he wanted to do it. I went along with it, and as far as performance goes, he did a great job.”
A standard-issue ’80s video for a standard-issue ’80s song like “Crazy Crazy Nights” was, of course, commissioned. Kiss assembled for a stadium-themed shoot in Los Angeles after 7,000 fans were recruited via radio station KNAC.
“Most bands are always going around saying, ‘Our fans are the greatest,’” Stanley enthused in the backstage interview, “but listen, there’s no other band I know of that can go on the radio and say, ‘We’re doing a video, we want you there’ and lo and behold, two days later you got a packed arena.”
Stanley, Simmons, guitarist Bruce Kulick and drummer Eric Carr performed older Kiss favorites for fans between takes at the Olympic Auditorium. Everyone who attended left with a limited-edition shirt reading: “I went crazy with Kiss.”
None of it helped “Crazy Crazy Nights” at American record shops, as the single stalled at No. 65 on the Billboard Hot 100. Still, it became their biggest hit in the U.K. and parts of Europe. “We see a lot of good times ahead,” Simmons said just before the launch of “Crazy Crazy Nights.”