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Ace Frehley
 
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Ace Frehley [IMPORT] [LIMITED EDITION]

Ace Frehley, Kiss
4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (100 customer reviews) More about this product

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Frequently Bought Together

Ace Frehley + Paul Stanley + Gene Simmons
Price For All Three: $70.96

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (June 25, 2008)
  • Original Release Date: October 1978
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import, Limited Edition
  • Label: Universal Japan
  • ASIN: B0017W7EQS
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (100 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #545,851 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Listen to Samples

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1. Rip It Out
2. Speedin' Back to My Baby
3. Snow Blind
4. Ozone
5. What's on Your Mind?
6. New York Groove
7. I'm in Need of Love
8. Wiped-Out
9. Fractured Mirror

Editorial Reviews

Product Description
Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) paper sleeve pressing. Universal. 2008.

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Customer Reviews

100 Reviews
5 star:
 (60)
4 star:
 (29)
3 star:
 (8)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (100 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Best of the four? Abso--lutely!, October 29, 2003
By S. Axe "maulrat" (Arlington Heights, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ace Frehley (Audio CD)
I recall the days back in '78 when I turned 9 years old and I got all four of the Kiss solo albums for my birthday ... lucky me eh?, looking back now I couldve saved the family the $$$ of the purchase of the other 3 albums if I had only known then what I found out soon after.

Anyhow back to the story/review .... back in those days I didn't have any particular liking or bias towards one Kiss "character" over another, I just loved their songs (okay I admit I always thought Ace's costumes were the coolest ... but thats besides the point) ... but after listening to all 4 solo efforts I found myself in an unusual position that I never had been in before ... I actually got that sick/embarrassed feeling when listening to Gene Simmons and Peter Criss' solo albums ... in particularly Genes rendition of "When You Wish Upon A Star".

Well, when I finally put on Ace's album (2nd to last ... Paul Stanleys I listened to last) I found myself playing it over and over and OVER AND OVER AND ... well, you get the idea! :) Especially the opening song "Rip It Out" ... which is by far my favorite! By the time I went to play Paul's album I just couldnt help but figit and basically say f&*k it and put Ace's album back on.

I have fond memories of air guitaring in front of my family's huge living room mirror to the likes of Rip It Out, Snow Blind, Ozone, I'm In Need Of Love, and Fractured Mirror. Funny that I no longer need to air guitar them but can actually play them :) But I digress.

Anyhow, there was no prejudice going into these solo albums ... its just that I happened to fall in love with Ace's solo album, which I CANNOT even come close to saying that about the others. In true metal-head mentality I can honestly say the other 3 "suck ass ... he he huh huh .. Beavis" .... okay, Paul's wasn't THAT bad ... but its was ruined after hearing Ace's.

Getting all that out of the way I have one thing to say ... and most of you wont like it ... BUT ... I always have and always will absolutely HATE the single "New York Groove" ... I'm sorry but its total cheese ... yes, I did get that embarrassed wrench in the gut feeling after hearing that song .... I dunno why ... but thats just the way it is. It has something to do with how the word "Groove" is sung in the chorus ... just bugs the hell outta me.

All in all though ... the BEST of the four ... by FAR!

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ace Frehley (1978), February 13, 2003
This review is from: Ace Frehley (Audio CD)
I absolutely thought KISS was one of the best things in my life when I was 9 or 10 years old. I didn't think a thing about the sexual innuendoes, the drugs, the whatevers, I just loved KISS. Now that I'm an adult, some of those sexual innuendoes are just hysterical, make you want to cringe thinking you liked it at one time, and make it an embarassment to say you liked KISS.

Ace Frehley in my mind was always exempt from this. By far, Ace was always my favourite member of KISS, his lead guitar playing is vastly underrated,(his leads had hooks, they were part of the song like the melody), and he didn't dive the depths of immature sexual innuendo as much as grown men such as Gene or Paul. Honestly, Gene and Paul wrote kiddie stuff, embarassing for a 35 year old to be writing honestly, and strictly derived to accomodate a certain market. Young, 16 year old boys who can't drink, smoke or get girls yet. Ace didn't write songs like that, apart from Cold Gin on the first KISS album.

This album stands well to time. The songs do not sound dated, the lyrics are not stupid or banal or anything indicating a 70's attitude, and it just rocks. All the way through. There is not a weak track on it, and even though criticism is there on Wiped Out from other fans, I love that song for its time changes (Anton Fig's drumming on this song is the album's standout) and it is just a great song period. Its always been one of my top 3 songs on the album. Ace just really showed how talented he was. I've never read Simmons autobiography, and I have no interest in it, but Ace always lived up to his potential even if he was chemically enhanced sometimes. Its why Ace's solo album was the best received by a wider fan base than the KISS Army, the critics and musicians alike, it was THAT good an album. It has an element of STREET about it, slightly punk in attitude. This album is actually full of attitude, and it just says New York all over it.

Ace had pop sensibilities as well. 'What's On Your Mind' borderlines between hard rock and pop. No, Ace is not the greatest singer, but he has that Jimi Hendrix approach where in the end you can't hear anyone else singing the songs as well but Ace Frehley.

It has become a cliche this album. I imagine people who don't even own it now say Frehley's album was the best when giving their mock history of KISS. The fact of the matter was, it is and still is. You can play the whole thing through and not smirk because the lyrics are hokey or childish, the guitar solos are polished and gutsy at the same time, the drummer was great, the songs and arrangements were class, the production was just near perfect but just enough punk to have credibility. If not for Frehley, the next KISS album (Dynasty) would have been horrible and so dated in sound and sentiment that they might not have survived to GET to the 80's. Some say Simmons and Stanley are KISS, including themselves, but what a shame. Ace Frehley consistently came up with songs that even KISS fans say are the best songs in the KISS repertoire, Cold Gin, Parasite, Shock Me, Rocket Ride, Hard Times. The guy just had tons of talent and should have gotten out of KISS as soon as he released this album.
THAT would have been a success story. Maybe Simmons is right and Frehley never lived up to his potential. Maybe its because he had Simmons telling him he never would, you just never know.

Do you mean to tell me that Ace Frehley all messed up on booze and drugs working at half the potential, STILL came up with a better KISS album than KISS ever achieved? Even with Destroyer, Rock and Roll Over, Hotter Than Hell, Ace Frehley's solo album was so together that no one could diss it. There's no Goin Blind's, no Great Expectations, no Love Theme From KISS, that just makes you say was this person serious when they wrote this? They are joking right??? Frehley's album you can listen to as a kid, and listen to as an adult and say, I knew I had good taste.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Best Rocking of the Ill-Conceived Kiss Solo Albums, July 14, 2001
This review is from: Ace Frehley (Audio CD)
Ace Frehley was the inadvertent catalyst of that memorable misstep of all four members of Kiss cutting solo albums at the end of the 1970s. Co-manager Bill Aucoin and bandmate Paul Stanley, desperate to keep Frehley in the band, suggested he cut a solo album to recharge himself but stay in the band; this led to the idea for each member of the quartet to cut a solo disc and then release them together. And it did keep Frehley in the band, at least for a couple of more years, anyway.

As it turned out, Aucoin and Stanley's original suggestion might have been best left unaltered - certainly, Frehley's set rocks the best and the brightest and, in the bargain, has the best material. (The Kiss solo albums stand for the most part as little more than offering a taste of what each individual brought into the band for root sensibilities, though each had its occasional moments, particularly bassist Gene Simmons' half-kidding crooning of "When You Wish Upon A Star".) Frehley's playing is pretty crisp and doesn't date (he was always a better musician than the critics would allow him); unfortunately, he's weaving silk purses from sow's ears and the threading doesn't hold too strongly. Still, you've got to give him credit: he was the only member of Kiss to get anything smelling like a hit from his solo album: "New York Groove" became a minor AOR hit and a deserved one, Frehley's arch stomp-rocker a genial salute to the rock senses in the city where Kiss got together in the first place and, for better or worse, shaped the taste of a generation and rewrote the book on arena rock presentation.

To save you a trip elsewhere, here's the skinny on the other Kiss solo sets: Paul Stanley is playing Mr. Big Rock Sex Star to the max; he's too self-conscious to bring it off without the loosey-goose bull kick of his Kiss mates, and he sure as hell needs their knowingness off which to bounce for his better song material. Peter Criss's loving croon of "Beth" was no fluke, but the Kiss trapsmasher should have picked some more truly soulful material to present himself as the Frank Sinatra of hard rock. Gene Simmons's cartoonish stage persona belied a kid who really did buy a lot of the familial cliche of his childhood (the only shock is that he didn't try a vocal version of "March of the Toys"), and it explains an awful lot about both his Kiss role and that he could cut such an endearingly sappy set that was nevertheless as disposable as one of the ketchup packets he'd chew up to spit stage blood.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars It's a bird, it's a plane, no it's Ace Frehley
First of all, let me preface why I gave this four stars instead of five. The only reason is that I don't give perfect ratings easily. Read more
Published 3 days ago by Jon Hailey

5.0 out of 5 stars Killer &0's Rock
What Can I say? It never got any better for ACE, Save a couple of tracks of Dynasty and Unmasked it never got better than this.. Read more
Published 2 months ago by P. English

3.0 out of 5 stars Not the Greatest
I have a lot of trouble seeing why people think this is the best of the four solo albums. There are many problems with this album. Read more
Published 4 months ago by O. Skinner

5.0 out of 5 stars amazing.


This is an amazing album.
Not only was it the best sounding and best written of the solo albums, it was also the best selling. Read more
Published 7 months ago by punk rock killah

4.0 out of 5 stars Rock On, Spaceman
Ace has always been THE man in KISS. When he left they plunged headlong into mediocrity. The man is one helluva guitar player. Read more
Published 8 months ago by WillyMcCabe

5.0 out of 5 stars THIS IS THE ACE !!!
Ace's 1978 solo album is a high! I've loved it since I first heard it back in 1981 and it has grown stronger since. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Paulo Alm

5.0 out of 5 stars Better without KISS
I'm being serious about this. If he isn't better, he's at least just as good by himself. I feel that without Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, Ace Frehley definitely had more... Read more
Published 9 months ago by RockinRobin411

4.0 out of 5 stars Space is the Place for Ace
Shooting for the stars, this September 1978 solo release from KISS lead guitarist Ace Frehley delivers a strong effort which has a great mix of pop and rock. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Mr. Richard D. Coreno

4.0 out of 5 stars Back in the New York Groove
Not a bad album at all. A good rock album. Not KISS, not his solo stuff, but a good solid outing nonetheless. This is definitely worth listening to.
Published 11 months ago by Christopher M. Fulton

5.0 out of 5 stars Ace proves himself as a rock & roll force
Ace's Kiss solo album is excellent. It's a perfect representation of everything Ace - funny, emotional, genuine, killer riffs, brilliant chord progressions, and blazing guitar... Read more
Published 15 months ago by I Rock

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