By Andrew Jacobs/DecibelGeek.com
Prior to working for KISS in the mid 1970s, were you a fan of them? Why or
why not?I had heard of the band. I was in college and graduate
school in the early to mid 1970s and I don't recall that KISS was popular among
the campus crowd. At the time, my musical tastes leaned more toward artists like
Johnny Winter, Lee Michaels, Leon Russell, The Rolling Stones and Eric
Clapton.
Throughout Eric Carr's and Bruce Kulick's tenures in
KISS, were their salaries roughly $2000/week ($100,000 annually) as has been
rumored?
More or less. I think that Eric's was at one point
higher but he had to take a pay cut because of KISS's financial
woes.
Did Eric Carr and Bruce Kulick receive any publishing
royalties for the songs that they co-wrote or were their salaries their only
compensation?
I believe that they received writer's royalties for
their share of any songwriting that they did. KISS owned the publishing rights.
Their salaries were not inclusive of compensation for songwriting duties.
Neither Bruce nor Eric were songwriters for hire as the term is defined in the
music industry.
Do you recall if the Animalize, Asylum and
Crazy Nights tours were profitable? In your book, you seemed to imply that they
were all break even propositions.
My recollection is that during
that period, the tours broke even, at best, from concert fees (monies earned
through ticket sales). Profits were generated from the sale of merchandise at
the concert venues.
At the time that you left the KISS
organization, were Gene and Paul both millionaires?
They each
would have had personal assets, mostly the value of their homes, in the
million-dollar-range. Their business was in a precarious state, however. Monies
coming in were being chewed up by expenses that enabled them to continue
operating as a business. And they had a huge tax liability on the horizon
stemming from a tax shelter that the government decided would be disallowed,
retroactively.
In the early 1990s, Gene was quite critical of
KISS's latter 1970s makeup years by saying that they over-merchandised, marketed
too heavily to the child demographic and generally lost touch with the fact that
first and foremost, they were a hard rock band. However, looking at KISS since
they put the makeup back on in 1996, it seems as though all of those latter
1970s makeup years elements are firmly back in place. Does this surprise you at
all or do you think that in the end, Gene was and is only in it for the
money?
Times change. In the 1980s, the costumed KISS was seen as
outdated and kiddie. By the mid 1990s, there apparently had developed a
groundswell of interest in the band and its original line-up. I'm sure that a
lot of it had to do with the band's fan base never having lost their love of the
original KISS, particularly if it was one of their favorite bands in childhood.
No other band came along to replace that feeling, which is the norm. Musical
tastes develop at an early age and are typically the deepest emotionally and the
most long-lasting.
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