Gene Simmons opens the vault
10-CD set will cost $2,000 and be hand-delivered by KISS frontman
Gene Simmons is digNEW YORK ging into his archives for a oneof-a-kind fan experience.
The eccentric KISS frontman is commemorating his 50-year career in music with Gene Sim
mons: The Vault Experience, a limited-edition box set featuring band memorabilia and 150 neverbefore-released tracks. The limited-edition, 38-pound vault includes 10 CDs, a non-makeup Simmons action figure, a gold medallion reading “In Gene We Trust,” a book of never-beforeseen images, and a hand-picked item from his personal collection.
“We all go through our lives doing whatever it is you’re doing,” Simmons says over coffee at Manhattan’s The London hotel. “Whether you think of it as a journey or a race, as you get closer to the finish line, that’s when you turn on the heat. I’m 68 now — I’m not going to live forever.” None of the music included in
The Vault Experience, which can be pre-ordered at genesimmons vault.com, will be released digitally. Songs include original demos and studio recordings, some of which, “stylistically, (are) all over the place, which is why (they) didn’t end up on KISS records,” Simmons explains.
There are also a slew of col- laborations, including demos of three tracks with Van Halen and a recording with Bob Dylan. One of the most personal is My Uncle
Is a Raft, the first song a teenage Simmons ever wrote and recorded. The tune is about his uncle, George, who became a father figure when he and his mother moved to the U.S. from Israel.
“I must’ve written over a hundred really horrible songs,” Simmons says. “My first one (went): ‘My uncle is a raft and he always keeps me floating. He is so good to me.’ I didn’t have the gift of gab — I wasn’t born in America — so my lyrics were bizarre.”
The set goes for $2,000 and will be hand-delivered to buyers by Simmons starting Dec. 31. Additional packages run $25,000 and $50,000 and include a Vault executive producer’s credit and a two-hour get-together with Simmons at a fan’s home.
Hefty price tag aside, Vault is the only opportunity for fans to hear new material from KISS for the foreseeable future: Simmons says the band has no plans to release another album.
“What’s the incentive of working for six months to a year on a new record when people are going to download it for free?” he says. “KISS is not a charity.”
Simmons says he doesn’t think about his band’s legacy, because “we’ve already scaled the heights.” When KISS was founded in 1973, “nobody thought it would go the distance. “‘Here’s an idea: I’m going to wear more makeup and higher heels than your mommy, and we’re going to look completely different than any band that’s out there, and I’m going to stick my tongue out and spit fire.’ ... Not a chance in hell.”