Wicked Lester - Wicked Lester(Kiss Before it was Kiss)

seeders: 2
leechers: 0
Added on April 4, 2015 by Tipplein Music > Mp3
Torrent verified.



Wicked Lester - Wicked Lester(Kiss Before it was Kiss) (Size: 39.32 MB)
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-1-Sweet Ophelia.mp33.01 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-10-(We Want To) Shout It Out Lou.mp32.41 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-11-Long_Road.mp33.96 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-12-Stanley The Parrot.mp33.92 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-13-Animal.mp33.89 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-2-Keep_Me_Waiting.mp33.14 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-3-Love_Her_All_I_Can.mp32.39 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-4-Simple_Type_remix_.mp32.35 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-5-She.mp32.67 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-6-Too Many_Mondays_Gene_on_voca.mp33.59 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-7-What Happened In The Darkness.mp32.75 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-8-When_The_Bell_Rings.mp32.95 MB
 Kiss-(1972) Wicked Lester-9-Molly.mp32.22 MB
 kiss-wickedlester-f.jpg64.67 KB

Description

Wicked Lester

Origin New York City, United States
Genres Rock and roll, folk rock, pop
Years active 1970–1973

Wicked Lester was a New York-based rock and roll band that would later become known as Kiss. The band formed in 1970, under its original name Rainbow. Notable members were bassist Gene Klein (born Chaim Witz) and rhythm guitarist Stanley Eisen, later to be known as Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, respectively. In 1971 the band changed their name to Wicked Lester, and recorded an album for Epic Records, which was never officially released.

The sessions have been released in bootleg form as The Original Wicked Lester Sessions. Kiss eventually released three tracks from these sessions on their 2001 Box Set release. Wicked Lester's music featured elements of rock and roll, folk rock and pop. Simmons and Stanley, feeling that the group lacked a unifying musical vision, began forming a new band in late 1972. With an emphasis on straightforward rock and roll plus theatrics, they became the hard rock band Kiss in early 1973.

The origins of the band trace to 1970, when bassist Gene Klein and keyboardist Brooke Ostrander recruited lead guitarist Stephen Coronel, a childhood friend and former bandmate of Klein's. The group took the name Rainbow shortly thereafter. Coronel recommended rhythm guitarist Stanley Eisen, who had actually been rejected by the group after a previous audition. Shortly after Eisen joined, Ostrander recruited drummer Joe Davidson, and the first Rainbow lineup was completed. Davidson's stay did not last long and he was replaced by Tony Zarrella.

In early 1971, Rainbow played its first show, which consisted of two sets performed at Richmond Community College in Staten Island. After the show, the group discovered that there was already another band called Rainbow. They decided to drop the name, and came up with the name Wicked Lester, which Simmons liked because it was unusual. While the decision to change the group's name came partly out of a desire to avoid any potential legal issues, it also reflected Klein and Eisen's desire to start playing more original compositions.
Crossroads

During their brief existence, Wicked Lester performed in public twice. The first show took place at the Rivoli Theatre in South Fallsburg, New York on April 23, 1971. The second, in late summer 1971, was at an Atlantic City, New Jersey hotel hosting a B'nai B'rith Youth Organization event. Not long after that show, the band suffered a major setback when they had all of their musical gear stolen. After a chance meeting with Electric Lady Studios engineer Ron Johnsen, Wicked Lester was given the opportunity to record some demos in late 1971. Johnsen, who produced the demo tape, shopped it to a few labels, with no success. Eventually the tape was screened by Epic Records, who purchased the masters and agreed to fund the recording of a full album. One of the conditions, however, was that Stephen Coronel be fired and replaced with a better guitarist.

Coronel was replaced by session musician Ron Leejack, and the group continued their efforts to finish the album. Some songs were completely re-recorded to accommodate Leejack's different playing style. The entire recording process, which followed a haphazard schedule, took nearly a year to complete. When the completed album was presented to Don Ellis, Epic's A&R director, he stated that he hated the album and was not going to release it. The next day, Wicked Lester manager Lew Linet requested and received the group's release from Epic Records.
Kiss

At this time, Klein and Eisen, now using the stage names Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, decided that one of the reasons for Wicked Lester's lack of success was their lack of a singular image and musical vision. They made the decision to move forward and start a new band. Wicked Lester began auditioning for a drummer in late 1972. Soon after, Tony Zarrella left the group. Ostrander, feeling that the band was going nowhere, quit. He went on to teach music at Missisquoi Valley Union High School in Swanton, Vermont. Ostrander died on September 3, 2011 from cancer.

Whereas Wicked Lester's original sound was rooted in varied musical styles, including folk and pop, when Simmons and Stanley decided to recruit new members, they made the decision to focus on a more aggressive and simple style of rock and roll. The first new member they added was drummer Peter Criss, who had placed an ad in Rolling Stone. The ad stated, "EXPD. ROCK & roll drummer looking for orig. grp. doing soft & hard music. Peter, Brooklyn." The new Wicked Lester, without a recording contract, began a strict and regular regimen of rehearsals.

In November 1972, the group arranged a showcase with Don Ellis, the Epic Records executive who earlier had rejected Wicked Lester's album. While one Epic executive, Tom Werman, was impressed by the power and theatrics of this new incarnation of Wicked Lester, Ellis once again turned them down. As Ellis was leaving, Peter Criss's brother, who was drunk, vomited on his foot. In early December, Paul Stanley placed an ad in The Village Voice stating, "LEAD GUITARIST WANTED with Flash and Ability. Album Out Shortly. No time wasters please." The ad ran for two issues, December 7 and December 14, 1972, leading to several audition sessions. One audition was by Paul "Ace" Frehley who showed up wearing different-colored shoes, walked into the room without saying a word, hooked up his guitar and started playing. Frehley was asked back for a second audition and was a member of the band by Christmas 1972. Within a few weeks, the group changed its name to Kiss. Their first concert on January 30, 1973.

The recording of Wicked Lester's album, which began in November 1971 at Electric Lady Studios in Greenwich Village, took place over multiple sessions and was finished in July 1972. The album was a mixture of original material and covers, showcasing the group's eclectic style. Three of the songs recorded for the Wicked Lester album would later resurface as Kiss songs, with varying degrees of similarity.

The chorus of their cover version of The Hollies' "I Wanna Shout" would serve as the inspiration for "Shout It Out Loud" from 1976's Destroyer, although the two songs are completely different in every other respect. Two of the tracks, "Love Her All I Can", written by Paul Stanley, and "She", written by Simmons and Steve Coronel would resurface on 1975's Dressed to Kill. "Love Her All I Can" featured similar arrangements in both versions while the Kiss version of "She" lacked the congas and flute of the original.

The only part of Wicked Lester's album to initially be released, was the cover art, which was used for The Laughing Dogs' self-titled debut album in 1979. CBS Records, who owned the rights to the album, remixed it and planned to release it in late 1976 to capitalize on Kiss's commercial popularity. Kiss and Neil Bogart, the president of their label, Casablanca Records, purchased the master tapes from CBS for $137,500 and never released it. The label and band feared that if CBS released the tracks it would diminish their commercial appeal. The band worried that their hard rock image would be damaged by these more eclectic recordings. It was also feared that the release would be accompanied by pictures of Simmons and Stanley without their trademark make-up, at this point in their career very few photographs of Kiss without their makeup existed. In later years the album surfaced as a bootleg named The Original Wicked Lester Sessions. The band bought Bogart's share and eventually released three of the tracks, "Keep Me Waiting," "She," and "Love Her All I Can", in 2001 as part of a five-disc box set.

Track-list:
01 "Love Her All I Can" (2:28) Stanley
02 "Sweet Ophelia" (2:56) Barry Mann/Gerry Goffin
03 "Keep Me Waiting" (3:04) Stanley
04 "Simple Type" (2:33) Simmons
05 "She" (2:54) Coronel/Simmons
06 "Too Many Mondays" (3:27) Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil
07 "What Happens In the Darkness" (2:59) Tamy Lester Smith
08 "When The Bell Rings" (3:11) Austin Roberts/Christopher Welch
09 "Molly" (aka "Some Other Guy") (2:23) Stanley
10 "We Want To Shout It Out Loud" (2:04) The Hollies

image

image






Sharing Widget


Download torrent
39.32 MB
seeders:2
leechers:0
Wicked Lester - Wicked Lester(Kiss Before it was Kiss)