Ace Frehley

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Ace Frehley album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:45

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Best of the four solo records and Ace's Best

banomassa

This is a crowning moment for Ace, he showed the rest of the band he was a great songwriter and he could really throw down but just wasn't into the stuff Kiss was doing at the time. I think with the exception of Rock and Roll over Ace wasn't feeling the material after Alive. And it shows Rock and Roll Over was Great had Ace's best playing to date, and this picks up where that left off. The playing on here smokes! A must have!

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They Say All Music Guide

Of the four Kiss solo albums released simultaneously in 1978, the best of the bunch is guitarist Ace Frehley’s. Similar in approach to Paul Stanley’s album, Frehley did not stray far from the expected heavy Kiss sound (like Gene Simmons and Peter Criss did with their releases), but Ace was equipped with better compositions than Stanley. With future Late Night with David Letterman drummer Anton Fig helping out (as well as Letterman bassist Will Lee on three tracks), Frehley proved once and for all that he was not simply a backup musician to Kiss head honchos Simmons and Stanley. All of the tracks are strong, such as the venomous opener, “Rip It Out,” as well as a few tracks that confirm how Frehley was indulging in alcohol and drugs a bit too much by the late ’70s (“Snow Blind,” “Ozone,” and “Wiped Out”). You’ll also find many underrated compositions (“Speedin’ Back to My Baby,” “What’s on Your Mind?,” “I’m in Need of Love”), a gorgeous instrumental (“Fractured Mirror”), and the Top 20 hit single “New York Groove.” Unfortunately, when Ace left Kiss in 1982 (eventually forming Frehley’s Comet), he never came close to topping this solid and inspired 1978 solo outing. – Greg Prato

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