Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Calling Dr. Love" is a song by American hard rock band Kiss, originally released on their 1976 album Rock and Roll Over. A live version of the song was included on Alive II , released in 1977. Since then, "Calling Dr. Love" has appeared on numerous Kiss compilation albums.
Three of Gene Simmons' songs are clear re-workings of demos from the 1975 Magna Graphics Studios demo: "Calling Dr. Love" is a re-working of "Bad, Bad Lovin'"; "Ladies Room" is based on "Don't Want Your Romance"; and "Love' Em and Leave' Em" is based on "Rock and Rolls-Royce"; [4] Criss's "Baby Driver" is a rewrite of a Peter Criss/Stan ...
The song was co-written by Paul Stanley and Michael Bolton. "Forever" begins with Stanley singing over an acoustic guitar intro, with the rest of the band joining during the first chorus.
"Christine Sixteen" is a song by American hard rock band Kiss. It originally appeared on their 1977 album Love Gun.Released as a single in the US in 1977, the song peaked at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart that year, [1] and did well in Canada, peaking at number 22.
"God of Thunder" is widely regarded as one of Kiss's best songs. In 2014, Paste ranked the song number 11 on their list of the 20 greatest Kiss songs, [2] and in 2019, Louder Sound ranked the song number eight on their list of the 40 greatest Kiss songs.
Hide Your Heart is a song by Welsh singer Bonnie Tyler, released on her 1988 album Hide Your Heart.The song was written by Kiss' rhythm guitarist and vocalist Paul Stanley, Desmond Child and Holly Knight.
Calling Dr. Luv is the third studio album by American industrial band The Electric Hellfire Club, released on September 3, 1996, by Cleopatra Records.The album is named after the Kiss song "Calling Dr. Love" and after their keyboardist The Rev. Dr. Luv who had recently died, which the album was dedicated to.
"Shout It Out Loud" is a song by the American hard rock group Kiss, originally released on their 1976 album, Destroyer. It was released as the lead single off the album, and it proved to be successful, becoming the band's second single to break the Top 40, after "Rock and Roll All Nite".