
KISS frontman Paul Stanley has pushed back on the criticism that the band received for not involving any past members of the group in their final concert at Madison Square Garden in late 2023.
The concert featured the final lineup of the band, founders Stanley and Gene Simmons, along with guitarist Tommy Thayer, and drummer Eric Singer. However, cofounders Peter Criss and Ace Frehley, or other former members like Bruce Kulick, Vinnie Vincent, or the late Eric Carr or Mark St. John, were not thanked or mentioned directly during the show.
Stanley was asked why the surviving past members were not part of the show during an appearance on the Talk is Jericho podcast. He explained, "To be somewhat diplomatic, there were people who made unrealistic demands of what they requiredt.
"And it's not about that. It wasn't, for example, a celebration of the beginning of the band; it was a celebration of 50 years of a band, as opposed to a tribute to the start."
He expanded on the tribute thought, . "What are we gonna have, videos up on the screen or draped photos? The fact that we were there, we were there because of everybody who participated, some more than others, but the tribute to everyone is us existing."
KISS Surpass 1 Billion Views of 'I Was Made For Loving You' Video
KISS Makeup Idea Backfired On Members Says Criss
Sebastien Tellier Taps Kid Cudi For New Song 'Amnesia'
Watch Harry Styles' 'Aperture' Video
Road Trip: First Trip to Africa? Make it Kenya! (Part 1)
RockPile: Ultravox, Atomik Train, Soen and Mercyland
Cruise News: Nocona is Ready to Rock the Outlaw Country Cruise
Sites and Sounds: Gulf Coast Jam To Feature Post Malone, Keith Urban, Chris Stapleton and More
Watch Lamb Of God's 'Blunt Force Blues' Visualizer
Rob Zombie Delivers New Album 'The Great Satan'
Paul McCartney: Man on the Run Soundtrack Arrives
LOLO Previews New Album With 'The Punisher'
KillerStar, With Bowie Collaborators, Share New Single 'Rubicon'
Atreyu Announce New Album With 'All For You' Video
Avenged Sevenfold's Zachary Baker Previews Alt-Country Debut With 'Lighthouse'
Singled Out: P.J.M. Bond's Ponderosa Pine