Continuing my mission to preserve early journalism, here is a rare cover appearance of the medium on , one of the world's best selling . Click on the images to get a better look, and enjoy the article!
The new issue of is now available. It is loaded down with gaming goodness, including articles, an ad for my books from McFarland Publishers, first-person shooter features and much more, including a piece on a lost arcade game by Ed Logg, written by my pal Michael Thomasson.
Rolling Stone magazine has announced a new song and album by Ace Frehley, one of my favorite musicians. You can listen to the new single here.
Here's the story from :
is beginning the new year by looking back. The former Kiss guitarist's
new LP, Origins Vol. 1 – due out April 15th – finds him covering songs by Jimi
Hendrix, the Rolling Stones, Thin Lizzy and other artists that have inspired
him over the years. His heavy-hitting take on Cream's "White Room" is
premiering here. The LP also features his first recording with Paul Stanley, an
impassioned interpretation of Free's "Fire and Water," in nearly two
decades. Other guests on the record include Slash, Pearl Jam's Mike McCready,
Lita Ford and Rob Zombie guitarist John 5.
"I'm
really thrilled with the whole thing," tells Rolling Stone.
"I'm excited about it, and probably somewhere down the road there'll be a
second volume."
"White
Room" holds a special place in the guitarist's heart, since he attended
Cream's New York City concert debut when he was about 15 – one of Frehley's
first concerts. " has always been a big influence on me,"
the guitarist says. "They were opening up for Mitch Ryder and the Detroit
Wheels. The Who was on the bill, too. Clapton had a big afro then and that
painted guitar. It was pretty cool and different. I always liked 'White
Room.'" Frehley's drummer, Scott Coogan, joins him on vocals for the song.
Frehley
shrugs off any residual tension between himself and Stanley. "We've always
been friends," he says. "The press seems to amplify negativity. I
guess it makes good copy."
Both
founding Kiss members were fans of Free and the song "Fire and
Water," the title cut of the "All Right Now" group's 1970 LP. had wanted to do a version of it since the Seventies, so he recorded
the backing tracks with his band and sent them to Stanley about a month ago,
with the Kiss singer sending his recorded parts right back.
"I
thought Paul did a fabulous vocal on it," the guitarist says. "He
jumped at the chance to do this because it's something that's outside of Kiss
and his character in Kiss, and it gave him a chance to, you know, sing. With
Paul, you usually think of him singing in a slightly higher register and on
'Fire and Water,' he's singing deep from his diaphragm, and it's a real cool
vocal. Everyone's who heard it was just thinks it's the shit."
Frehley
also enjoyed lining up his other guests on the album. McCready plays on Kiss'
"Cold Gin," a tune Frehley wrote, but sang originally.
"I've been a big influence on Mike, at least that's what he tells me," the former Kiss guitarist says. Slash plays on Thin Lizzy's
"Emerald," and he contributed to the recording by suggesting both he
and Frehley play live at the same time, something they did 15 times. "It
took me three days to pick the best takes," Frehley says, "and I
think it came out great."
Lita
Ford joined him on the Troggs' "Wild Thing." "It has almost a
garage-band flare to it," the guitarist says. And finally, John 5 wowed
Frehley with his playing on Hendrix's "Spanish Castle Music" and
Kiss' "Parasite," another -penned song he's singing for the
first time on Origins. "John 5 was amazing to watch," he says.
"He inspired me and obviously I inspire him. It was a lot of fun."
Origins
Vol. 1 Track List
1.
"White Room" (Cream)
2.
"Street Fighting Man" (Rolling Stones)
3.
"Spanish Castle Magic," feat. John 5 (Jimi Hendrix)
When I was a kid, one of my favorite TV shows was Land of the Lost
, which played on Saturday mornings. It ran for three seasons. The first two were the best--real science fiction writers like and wrote some of the scripts--but I enjoyed every episode. Decades later, I introduced the show to my kids. It can be a little cheesy, but it's great fun. Another of my favorite things was , so you can imagine how excited I was when the Sleestaks appeared on the cover of issue #13. Click on the images for a closer look, and enjoy the article!