|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Dressed To Kill

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (31 ratings)
Dressed To Kill album cover
01
Room Service
3:01
$0.99
02
Two Timer
2:49
$0.99
03
Ladies In Waiting
2:33
$0.99
04
Getaway
2:44
$0.99
05
Rock Bottom
3:55
$0.99
06
C'mon And Love Me
2:58
$0.99
07
Anything For My Baby
2:36
$0.99
08
She
4:09
$0.99
09
Love Her All I Can
2:41
$0.99
10
Rock And Roll All Nite
2:49
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 30:15

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Worth the price just for She

banomassa

Dressed to kill is a solid album, the only song I don't really care for it the one that would become their biggest known song. Don't get me wrong Rock and Roll all Nite is a good song just my least favorite hear. I was always a fan of Getaway a track that seems to get forgotten. But for me the gem here is She is has such a cool riff and even better solo.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

By the release of their third album, 1975′s Dressed to Kill, Kiss were fast becoming America’s top rock concert attraction, yet their record sales up to this point did not reflect their ticket sales. Casablanca label head Neil Bogart decided to take matters into his own hands, and produced the new record along with the band. The result is more vibrant sounding than its predecessor, 1974′s sludgefest Hotter Than Hell, and the songs have more of an obvious pop edge to them. The best-known song on the album by far is the party anthem “Rock and Roll All Nite,” but it was the track “C’Mon and Love Me” that became a regional hit in the Detroit area, giving the band their first taste of radio success. Since the band was on the road for a year straight, songs such as “Room Service” and “Ladies in Waiting” dealt with life on the road (i.e., groupies), and a pair of songs were reworked from Kiss’ precursor band, Wicked Lester (“Love Her All I Can” and “She”). With Dressed to Kill’s Top 40 showing on the Billboard charts, the stage was now set for Kiss’ big commercial breakthrough with their next release. – Greg Prato

more »

Activity