| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 36292 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $3.97 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Release Date: | 1997-08-12 |
| Label: | Island / Mercury |
| UPC: | 731453238220 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Island / Mercury |
| ASIN: | B000001EL9 |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Alive II by Island / Mercury
- Detroit Rock City
- King of the Night Time World
- Ladies Room - Kiss, Simmons, Gene [1]
- Makin' Love
- Love Gun
- Calling Dr. Love - Kiss, Simmons, Gene [1]
- Christine Sixteen - Kiss, Simmons, Gene [1]
- Shock Me - Kiss, Frehley, Ace
- Hard Luck Woman
- Tomorrow and Tonight
- I Stole Your Love
- Beth - Kiss, Criss, Peter
- God of Thunder
- I Want You
- Shout It Out Loud - Kiss, Ezrin, Bob
- All-American Man
- Rockin' in the USA - Kiss, Simmons, Gene [1]
- Larger Than Life - Kiss, Simmons, Gene [1]
- Rocket Ride - Kiss, Frehley, Ace
- Any Way You Want It - Kiss, Clark, Dave [Drums]
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Description
2006 Japanese limited edition issue of the album classic in a deluxe, miniaturized LP sleeve replica of the original vinyl album artwork.
Customer Reviews
Alive II: Second time is NOT the charm! - Reviewed on 2008-09-03
2 customers found this review helpful.
KISS' first live album, "Alive!" was a fluke...nobody expected it to perform as it did, and that album basically started KISS on thier meteoric rise in fame amd world-reknown. "Alive!" was really just a live set of thier first three studio albums, all that they had released up to that point in thier career. KISS tried to duplicate that formula for "Alive II", and released a set of live performances of thier following three studio albums: "Destroyer", "Rock and Roll Over", and "Love Gun".
Many things conspired to prevent this album from turning out as awesome as the first live album: This was the era when wireless guitars and amps were just becoming practical for concert use, and KISS was one of the early-adopters of the technology for obvious reasons. Unfortunately, this also imparted a rather trebly, tinny sound to the recording which dramatically reduced the bombast and thrust of the music. Compounding this was the venue where it was recorded: The LA Ampi-theatre, a large outdoor complex, which made the acoustics something less than favorable for a professional recording.
For the first live album, many of the studio songs were lengthened with longer intros, longer guitar solos, and in the case of a couple of tunes, an additional, second guitar solo. This enabled the meager amount of songs to nicelty fill up 4 album sides of the first release, a double album.
For "Alive II", the songs were played with no 'extras', so they were all realatively short. Even the 'long' drum solo in "God of Thunder" was miniscule as compared to the drum solo on "Alive!" Consequently, there was not enough material to fill up four sides of a double album by using tunes only from the last three studio releases. KISS even went so far as the record three songs 'live' that they did not actually play during that 3-night concert: "King of the Nightime World","Hard Luck Woman" and "Tomorrow and Tonight" were all recorded 'live' during the day-time soundcheck before that night's actual concert, and the crowd noise was edited into the tracks for the album.
The fourth 'studio' side was a harbinger of things to come. Not one of the studio songs on the album contained all the members of KISS playing on the same track. These were more like preliminary efforts made for thier up-coming individual solo albums.
Whereas the first live album, "Alive!", definitely improves on nearly every studio version of the songs they played, "Alive II" almost universally presented inferior versions of every song. The fact that KISS' production values made a vast improvement in studio recordings from thier first three studio albums to thier second set of three studio albums has a lot to do with that.
Nevertheless, "Alive II" is not the phnomenon that "Alive!" was (and still is!)
To make it clear, "Alive II' is a good album when compared to most other typical albums of the era (especially the average 'live' album), but "Alive II" has the unfortunate disadvantage of always being directly compared to "Alive!"...a comparison that very few albums could ever hope to end up favorably.
Kiss Alive II defined and era - Reviewed on 2008-04-10
If you're a Kiss fan, Alive II is essential. If you're not a big Kiss fan, start with Alive!(one) before II if you're looking for their best stuff. To any member of the Kiss Army, Alive II is a classic. But what a difference from the raw, powerful rock of Alive! to Alive II's pomp and circimstance. Still a must have though - it's Kiss in 1978, still riding their peak. This album has been in steady heavy rotation for my listening from 1978 until today. With three sides live and the forth of studio efforts marking the beginning of the end for the original line up this album is not only great for the music but a huge chapter in Kisstory as well. Standout tracks: Detroit Rock City, Love Gun, Dr. Love, Shock Me, Larger Than Life, Rocket Ride.
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Book Subjects
- Album Rock
- Arena Rock
- Hard Rock
- Heavy Metal
- Pop
- Pop-Metal
- Pop/Rock Music
- Rock
- Rock/Pop