The Day

Ex-Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley is back with another great solo album

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No shock here: Ace Frehley has still got the power.

The former Kiss guitarist whose vocal debut came on 1977’s “Shock Me” is back with “10,000 Volts,” a new solo album that’s crackling with energy and personalit­y.

The title track is another electricit­y-themed song from Frehley, who sustained a major electrical shock on stage in 1976 from touching an ungrounded metal railing. The foundation­al guitar riff is true ear candy, one that will stay in your brain for weeks with just a single listen.

“Up In The Sky” is vintage Space Ace wondering about mysterious lights in the heavens (“I know what I saw!”) and “Cosmic Heart” is a dark, slower-paced rocker reminiscen­t of Kiss’s “She” from 1975.

Frehley remains one of hard rock’s classic guitar pioneers, with a string-bending, blues-based vibrato sound that’s instantly recognizab­le.

“Back Into My Arms Again” is a holdover from his first solo tour in 1985 that was never recorded until now.

It’s the kind of power ballad MTV ate up in the 1980s; it remains to be seen how well it might do now.

“Fightin’ For Life” is the album’s hardest rocker, about his days running with a street gang in New York City. “Constantly Cute” is a catchy pop-rocker marred by truly cringe-worthy lyrics that even a puppy-love-smitten 12-year old wouldn’t use, and “Blinded” takes aim at the risks of artificial intelligen­ce.

It ends, as all Ace Frehley solo albums do, with an instrument­al in the style and spirit of “Fractured Mirror,” the acoustic-electric compositio­n that closed his self-titled 1978 solo album. This one is called “Stratosphe­re,” and it highlights Ace’s creativity and songwritin­g talents better than many of the vocal tracks.

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