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13 search results for: Alice Cooper

1

Alice Cooper- Billion Dollar Babies

In February 1973 when Alice Cooper’s sixth album “Billion Dollar Babies” went  #1 sales, we all thought that Marshall McLuhan, Andy Warhol, and Alice Cooper were being hyperbolic with their predictions about video fame’s impact on society. We laughed then, but as it turns out, the joke’s on us…Alice Cooper is my fascinating guest on the 50th anniversary of “ Billion Dollar Babies”.

2

Alice Cooper- School’s Out- Dallas 4-29-73

the “Dallas Alice” that Little Feat was namechecking in their song “Willin’ ” along about the same time as this ultra-rare Alice Cooper live recording took place in April 1973 in Dallas TX was a whole ‘nuther creature!

3

Alice Cooper- School’s Out: Best Of pt 2

When it came exploding out of the dashboard radio in May 1972, “School’s Out” by Alice Cooper was louder, brasher, with more swagger than anything we’d ever heard on the Top 40. But with the Woodstock Generation inheriting a world of endless Viet Nam War escalation, Richard Nixon landslide re-election, while astronauts golfed on the moon, “School’s Out” ominously was a sobering reality check for millions as well. Alice Cooper is my guest In the Studio on the golden anniversary.

4

Alice Cooper- Love It to Death- Killer

“Love It to Death” in March 1971 may have been the the third album by the band Alice Cooper, but that doesn’t change the fact that nobody bought the first two. By December of that same year, EVERYBODY had heard “I’m Eighteen” off of Love It to Death ,  and Alice Cooper had written and recorded a soon-to-be-classic additional full album, Killer .And it was

5

Alice Cooper- Under My Wheels- Dallas 4-29-73

Music historians and longtime fans often emphasize what a good live band the original Alice Cooper outfit was from 1971 to 1974 before the sideshow theatrics moved center stage, but not a lot of examples exist to support that contention, which is why this rare performance of “Under My Wheels” in Dallas in April 1973 is a real treat. -Redbeard

6

KISS 50th Anniversary- Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons 2-12

I still recall receiving in early 1974 the debut album from a largely unknown band called KISS. “Alice Cooper was the biggest thing in music in 1973,” Alice once told me here In the Studio, “so a band with four Alices? Couldn’t miss.” Paul Stanley & Gene Simmons guest here the week of February 12 for the KISS 50th anniversary.

7

History of Heavy Metal pt1

the leaders of the pioneering bands who forged the foundation of Heavy Metal: Deep Purple’s Ian Gillan and Roger Glover; Alice Cooper; Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons of KISS; Rob Halford of Judas Priest; the late Ronnie Montrose & his discovery Sammy Hagar; Alex Lifeson and Geddy Lee of Rush

8

KISS 50th Anniversary- Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons

For the golden anniversary of Kiss, lead singer/guitarist/songwriter Paul Stanley told me about the band fraternity of groups with whom they shared the stage some fifty years ago, “The lovefest ended when we hit the stage, because we were there to destroy them.” Gene Simmons agrees, “Putting on the make up was like putting on warpaint.”