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"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.
Rock and Roll Over is the fifth studio album by American rock band Kiss, released on November 11, 1976, by Casablanca Records. It was recorded at the Star Theatre in Nanuet, New York. The album contains the songs "Hard Luck Woman" and "Calling Dr. Love", which became hit singles in the United States.
Kiss covered Bobby Rydell's "Kissin' Time" for their 1974 self-titled debut album. Kim Fowley co-wrote two songs on 1976's Destroyer – "King of the Night Time World" and "Do You Love Me". Kiss recorded a cover of "Then He Kissed Me", originally by The Crystals, under the title "Then She Kissed Me", for the 1977 album Love Gun.
Alive II is the second live album by American hard rock band Kiss, released on October 14, 1977, by Casablanca Records. [2] The band had released three albums (Destroyer, Rock and Roll Over, and Love Gun) since the previous live outing, the 1975 release Alive!, so they drew upon the variety of new tracks, with Eddie Kramer producing.
"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.
"Beth" is Kiss's biggest commercial hit in the United States, reaching #7 on the Billboard Hot 100, receiving a Gold Record certification from the RIAA, and winning the 1977 People's Choice Award for "Favorite Song". The song was created from a demo called "Beck", something Criss and Penridge put together during their time with the band Chelsea.
"Hard Luck Woman" is a song by American hard rock band Kiss and the lead single from their 1976 album, Rock and Roll Over. It was originally written by Paul Stanley as a possible track for Rod Stewart, but after the success of the soft rock ballad "Beth", Kiss decided to keep it for themselves as a follow-up. [2]
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.