
10 Essential Ace Frehley Songs
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From Kiss classics to solo highlights â here are the rock legend’s finest moments
Ace Frehley wasn’t just Kiss’ lead guitarist: He also sang some of the group’s most rocking songs.
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Ace Frehley was the spaceman guitar hero at the heart of Kiss. Just a kid from the Bronx, he transformed into an extraterrestrial rock monster with his silver makeup and glittery astronaut boots. As Space Ace, he was the driving force of Kiss with his heavy riffs, a larger-than-life strutter inspiring countless kids over the decades to pick up the guitar and play along â whoever your favorite bands are, the guitarists probably started out as Ace fans. But he was more than just a classic rock & roll character â his musical legacy is as gigantic as the planet Jendell itself. Here are some of the classic songs that will keep the Ace Frehley legend alive forever.
Kiss, âParasiteâ
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The Nineties were an all-time peak for guitar bands, and thatâs because Nineties bands were full of guitar players who grew up worshipping Ace and the spell he cast in Kiss songs like âParasite.â Itâs the most proto-grunge of Kiss tunes, heavy as a dinosaur but surprisingly fast on its feet. Itâs a highlight of Hotter Than Hell, the album where Ace really stepped out as a songwriter and lead guitarist (Gene sang it), alongside âStrange Waysâ and âCominâ Home.â But the punk thrash of âParasiteâ is Ace at his toughest, showing why he got more influential as a guitarist over the years. âR.S.
Kiss, âCold Ginâ
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The first classic that Ace Frehley ever wrote, âCold Ginâ was a highlight of Kissâ raw 1974 debut album, a tale of drunken debauchery that turned out to be prescient in terms of all the turmoil to come. But Ace didnât feel quite confident enough to sing it himself, so ironically, the lead vocals were by Gene Simmons, who didnât touch a drop. Kiss kept playing âCold Ginâ off and on for decades, but the definitive version is on Alive!, with Paul Stanleyâs legendary intro banter, pleading, âThereâs gotta be some people out there that like to drink tequila!â According to an anonymous source backstage, Paul reports on the popularity of vodka and orange juice. (âAaaall riiiight!â) But when he quizzes the Kiss Army on their favorite quencher, the peopleâs choice is clearly âCold Gin.â âR.S.
Kiss, âShock Meâ
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In a sense, Ace Frehley put his life on the line for rock & roll every time Kiss took the stage due to the pyrotechnics that shot out of his guitar, which were somewhat primitive in the bandâs early days. Such a disaster nearly came to pass one night in Lakeland, Florida, when he was electrocuted. âI got knocked back, 220 volts,â he later recalled, âand I was knocked out for about five minutes. I had burns on my fingers. I almost bit the bullet.â But the scary incident ended up inspiring the song that had his first lead vocal for the band, as well as one of the best guitar solos on any Kiss song. In Aceâs optimistic reimagining, the painful experience is transformed into a song about sex â the work of a man who made transcending reality his everyday gig. âJ.D.
Kiss, âRocket Rideâ
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Kiss tried to duplicate the âliveâ-vibe success of their seminal 1975 Alive! album with Alive II, while also offering fans a handful of studio recordings. The best of them is Ace Frehleyâs âRocket Ride,â a blast of sexual-innuendo rock & roll that played right into the roguish guitaristâs strengths. Thereâs a monster riff, a shout-along chorus, and an ad-lib for the ages: âCome on, grab ahold of my rocket!â Ace shouts. Subtle, it was not. âJ.H.
âNew York Grooveâ
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When Kiss came up with the idea of releasing four solo records on the same day, not many people involved with the gambit wouldâve imagined that Frehleyâs would be the most successful â including the other members of Kiss, who condescendingly offered him help with the project. But it ended up being the breakout hit, thanks to Aceâs smash version of âNew York Groove,â originally by U.K. glam band Hello. Frehley was skeptical of recording the song when producer Eddie Kramer initially proposed the idea, but he threw himself into it, taking inspiration from his deep knowledge of the then-vibrant Times Square prostitution scene â and he came up with one of the most beloved tunes of the 1970s. âJ.D.
âRip It Outâ
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Sept. 18, 1978, was perhaps the most Seventies day of the Seventies: The day all four members of Kiss released simultaneous solo albums. But Ace stood head, shoulders, and space boots above his bandmates on this day with his solo album, kicking it off with âRip It Out.â For the others, âRip It Outâ would have been a standout contender for a hit. On Aceâs album, it got overshadowed by âNew York Groove,â but âRip It Outâ is the connoisseurâs pick for solo Ace â he wails about betrayed love, but lets his Gibson do most of the talking. âR.S.
Kiss, âHard Timesâ
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Dynasty, Kissâ 1979 disco-leaning effort, and its radio hit âI Was Made for Loving Youâ left some members of the Kiss Army thinking their superheroes had gone soft. But Ace Frehley made sure a gritty rock edge remained in the bandâs sound with âHard Times,â one of three Dynasty tracks on which he sang lead. He wrote âHard Times,â too, and it ripples with his Bronx attitude: âWe had to fight to be accepted!â he sneers at one point. âThe hard times have made me strong.â âJ.H.
Frehleyâs Comet, âCalling to Youâ
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Ace Frehley left Kiss in 1982 and soon formed Frehleyâs Comet. The band released its self-titled debut in 1987. The singles were âInto the Nightâ and âRock Soldiers,â the latter recorded with a âguitar armyâ and inspired by being chased by the police while drunk-driving his DeLorean. But the catchiest thing on the album is âCalling to You,â a fun pop-metal ode to the rock & roll lifestyle. âSome canât understand/And theyâll only go so far,â he sings. For Ace, too far was always just the starting point. âJ.D. Â
âDo Yaâ
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When Ace Frehley released 1989âs Trouble Walkinâ, his second solo album under his own name â his first non-Kiss LPs were as Frehleyâs Comet â he included a radio-ready version of Jeff Lynneâs âDo Ya.â Originally cut by the Move and later made a bona fide hit by Lynneâs ELO, the crunchy rock song was the perfect vehicle for Frehley the solo artist, and its video put the guitaristâs face (sans paint) on MTV. Frehley also took the opportunity to make âDo Yaâ his own, literally. For the final chorus, he cheekily shouts-out himself: âDo ya, do ya want the Ace?â âJ.H.
âOuter Spaceâ
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For his first solo album in 20 years, Anomaly, Ace Frehley leaned hard into his origin story â but not the New York one. Rather, he embraced his fantastical Spaceman persona over songs like the cosmic instrumental âSpace Bearâ and the on-the-nose rocker âOuter Space.â âItâs like I told you, I came from outer space,â he sings on the latter. âI want to take you away.â The album may have appealed most to hardcore Ace fans, but it succeeded in proving that Frehley still had the chops of a pioneering guitarist. Listen to his extended solo break just after the 2:00 mark and marvel. âJ.H.
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