Lick It Up World Tour

The Lick It Up World Tour was a concert tour by American hard rock band Kiss, in support of their eleventh studio album Lick It Up. It was the last tour to feature lead guitarist Vinnie Vincent.

Lick It Up World Tour
Tour by Kiss
Associated albumLick It Up
Start dateOctober 11, 1983
End dateMarch 17, 1984
Legs2
No. of shows94
Kiss concert chronology

Background

It was the first tour the band performed without wearing their trademark make-up, following the reveal of the members without them on MTV in September 1983,[1] basing it on how bands, fans and the times change.[2] The tour began in Cascais, Portugal on October 11, 1983 when they performed for the first time without the usage of makeup.[3] According to Simmons, fan reaction in Europe was 'greater than ever' and had sold out in advance.[2] When asked if the removal of the makeup meant that it was a farewell tour, Simmons stated that it was not, saying "If that were the case, I'd rather let the thing fade away. We're only doing this because, after the tour and making Lick It Up, we feel stronger than ever."[4]

The "tank" stage design from the preceding Creatures of the Night tour was used again, keeping all the same gimmicks.[5] The January 11 show in Nashville was recorded, and an edited version aired on The King Biscuit Flower Hour.[6] At the January 27 show in Long Beach, Kiss were presented with their first gold records since 1980 for the Lick It Up album.

Lead guitarist Vinnie Vincent was fired after the European Tour due to "unethical behavior". Kiss did not have enough time to search for another guitarist, so they re-hired Vincent for the North American leg until his firing became permanent after the tour ended.[7] Bass guitarist Gene Simmons stated in various interviews that Vincent's dismissal was because he never signed his contract as an official member of Kiss and for unethical behavior.[8] Stanley later admitted that Vincent had to go, stating that he was getting worse and stalling the shows with lengthy guitar solos.[9] There were also issues regarding Vincent over his salary, who wanted a better deal and complained about the contract and working conditions, who eventually drove Stanley and Simmons to fire him when they accused him of trying to hijack the band.[10]

In the tour program for the band's final tour, Simmons reflected on the tour:

The Lick It Up tour was a challenge, at least initially, as it was the first tour we did without makeup and I had to re-calibrate from being the fire-spewing Demon with eight-inch heels to a mere mortal playing rock and roll music. But Kiss are survivors. We survived in makeup and out of makeup; we survived all different kinds of music-thrash, disco, dance, grunge, new romance and we survive, persevere and thrive. It means we win! Kiss has always marched to the beat of their own drum.[11]

Reception

A local reporter who attended the Lakeland performance on December 29, 1983, opened their review by stating that before the removal of the make-up, it was easy to laugh at Kiss - referring to them as clowns that weren't amusing. However, they noted the positivity of the changes in the band's personnel and the band's hopes to retake the lead in the heavy metal industry. They praised the song "I Love It Loud", citing it as a song to capsulize the revitalized band's performance to 6,000 fans that night.[12]

Chuck Gates, a reporter from the Deseret News, who had attended the Salt Palace performance on February 5, 1984, opened his review by stating that the band was 'mediocre then and still is'. He noted on the inclusion of songs from the band's album Lick It Up, but had inquired about the exclusion of the band's two hit songs "Beth" and "I Was Made for Lovin' You". Regarding the stage, he acknowledged the lack of theatrics and makeup, and the absence of both Ace Frehley and Peter Criss - to which he stated that all that was left was a mediocre heavy metal band playing at deafening volumes.[13]

John Laycock from the Windsor Star who had attended the Cobo Arena show opened their review by stating that the band continued to roar without their makeup. He acknowledged the usage of Simmons' fire-breathing effects and the new wave haircuts that band members had. Even with the sight of no makeup, he reported the sturdiness of the band's songs during the performance, as well as noting on how the band's clothes had changed and not the music. He concluded his review, saying that the show remains a vividly staged break from sanity.[14]

Setlist

These are example setlists of what was performed during the tour on each leg, but may not represent the majority of the tour.[15]

Tour dates

Date City Country Venue Opening Act(s)
Europe[15]
October 11, 1983CascaisPortugalPavilhão de CascaisHelix
October 13, 1983MadridSpainPabellón de Deportes del Real MadridHelix
Tigres de Oro
October 14, 1983
October 15, 1983San SebastiánVelódromo de Anoeta
October 16, 1983BarcelonaPalau dels Esports de Barcelona
October 18, 1983ToulouseFrancePalais des Sports de ToulouseHelix
October 19, 1983Clermont-FerrandMaison des Sports
October 21, 1983LeedsEnglandQueens HallHelix
Heavy Pettin'
October 22, 1983StaffordBingley Hall
October 23, 1983LondonWembley Arena
October 24, 1983LeicesterDe Montfort Hall
October 25, 1983PoolePoole Arts Center
October 27, 1983GlasgowScotlandGlasgow Apollo
October 28, 1983EdinburghEdinburgh Playhouse
October 29, 1983Newcastle-upon-TyneEnglandNewcastle City Hall
October 31, 1983ParisFranceEspace BalardHelix
November 1, 1983Offenbach am MainWest GermanyStadthalle Offenbach
November 2, 1983MunichLöwenbräukeller
November 3, 1983BaselSwitzerlandSt. Jakobshalle
November 4, 1983SindelfingenWest GermanyMessehalle
November 6, 1983Neunkirchen am BrandHemmerleinhalle
November 7, 1983LinzAustriaLinzer Sporthalle
November 8, 1983ViennaWiener Stadthalle
November 9, 1983GrazEisstadion Liebenau
November 10, 1983EssenWest GermanyGrugahalle
November 11, 1983KasselEissporthalle Kassel
November 12, 1983LilleFrancePalais de la Foire
November 13, 1983BrusselsBelgiumForest National
November 15, 1983LausanneSwitzerlandHalle des Fêtes de Beaulieu
November 17, 1983RisskovDenmarkVejlby-Risskov Hallen
November 18, 1983GothenburgSwedenScandinavium
November 19, 1983StockholmJohanneshovs Isstadion
November 20, 1983MalmöMalmö Isstadion
November 21, 1983HillerødDenmarkFrederiksborg Center
November 23, 1983HelsinkiFinlandHelsinki Ice Hall
November 25, 1983OuluOulu-halli
North America[15][16]
December 26, 1983AtlantaUnited StatesThe Omni ColiseumAxe
Pat Travers Band
December 28, 1983AugustaAugusta-Richmond County Civic CenterAxe
December 29, 1983LakelandLakeland Civic CenterAxe
Pat Travers Band
December 30, 1983Pembroke PinesHollywood Sportatorium
December 31, 1983JacksonvilleJacksonville Memorial Coliseum
January 1, 1984TallahasseeLeon County Civic CenterAxe
January 6, 1984BirminghamBoutwell Memorial AuditoriumVandenberg
Riot
January 7, 1984MemphisMid-South Coliseum
January 8, 1984New OrleansKiefer UNO Lakefront Arena
January 9, 1984BiloxiMississippi Coast Coliseum
January 10, 1984KnoxvilleKnoxville Civic Coliseum
January 11, 1984NashvilleNashville Municipal Auditorium
January 13, 1984DallasDallas Convention Center
January 14, 1984San AntonioHemisFair Arena
January 16, 1984AustinPalmer Auditorium
January 17, 1984San AngeloSan Angelo Coliseum
January 18, 1984HoustonSam Houston Coliseum
January 19, 1984Corpus ChristiCorpus Christi Memorial Coliseum
January 21, 1984El PasoEl Paso County Coliseum
January 22, 1984AlbuquerqueTingley Coliseum
January 23, 1984OdessaEctor County Coliseum
January 25, 1984DenverUniversity of Denver Arena
January 27, 1984Long BeachLong Beach Arena
January 28, 1984Las VegasThomas & Mack Center
January 29, 1984FresnoSelland Arena
January 31, 1984RenoLawlor Events Center
February 1, 1984BerkeleyBerkeley Community Theatre
February 2, 1984BakersfieldBakersfield Civic Auditorium
February 3, 1984San BernardinoOrange Pavilion
February 5, 1984Salt Lake CitySalt Palace
February 8, 1984Sioux CitySioux City Municipal AuditoriumVandenberg
High Fever
February 9, 1984OmahaOmaha Civic AuditoriumVandenberg
Heaven
February 10, 1984MilwaukeeMECCA Arena
February 11, 1984DubuqueFive Flags Center
February 12, 1984BloomingtonMet Center
February 14, 1984Green BayBrown County Veterans Memorial Arena
February 15, 1984ChicagoUIC Pavilion
February 16, 1984IndianapolisMarket Square Arena
February 17, 1984SaginawWendler Arena
February 18, 1984DetroitCobo Arena
February 19, 1984ColumbusBattelle Hall
February 21, 1984TrotwoodHara Arena
February 22, 1984RichfieldRichfield Coliseum
February 24, 1984WorcesterCentrum in WorcesterAccept
February 26, 1984HamptonHampton Coliseum
February 28, 1984BaltimoreBaltimore Civic Center
March 1, 1984New HavenNew Haven Coliseum
March 3, 1984Upper DarbyTower Theater
March 4, 1984PittsburghStanley Theater
March 5, 1984ErieErie Civic Center
March 7, 1984BinghamtonBroome County Veterans Memorial Arena
March 8, 1984PoughkeepsieMid-Hudson Civic Center
March 9, 1984New York CityRadio City Music Hall
March 10, 1984
March 12, 1984Quebec CityCanadaColisée de Québec
March 13, 1984MontrealMontreal Forum
March 15, 1984TorontoMaple Leaf Gardens
March 17, 1984EvansvilleUnited StatesRoberts Municipal Stadium

Personnel

References

  1. Wilkening, Matthew (September 18, 2015). "The Day Kiss Finally Removed Their Makeup". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  2. Bishop, Pete (March 1, 1984). "Kiss the old KISS goodbye". Pittsburgh: The Pittsburgh Press. p. C1. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  3. Wilkening, Matthew (October 11, 2015). "When Kiss Played Their First Show Without Makeup". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved December 10, 2021.
  4. "Announcing the plain, unvarnished Kiss". New York: The Telegraph. October 28, 1983. p. 17. Retrieved January 3, 2022.
  5. Campbell, Mary (October 21, 1983). "Kiss behind the makeup". Lakeland Ledger. p. 2C. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  6. MacMaster, Claire (November 27, 1984). "Airwaves". The Boston Phoenix. p. 16. Retrieved December 8, 2021. 11:00 (WCBN) King Biscuit Flower Hour. Motley Crue and Kiss
  7. Blau, Max (April 8, 2014). "Inside a Hair-Metal Meltdown: Search for Ex-Kiss Guitarist Vinnie Vincent". Rolling Stone. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  8. Filcman, Debra (September 2, 2018). "Gene Simmons: Vinnie Vincent Headed for 'More Legal Problems'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  9. Stanley, Paul (2014). Face the Music: A Life Exposed. New York: Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-06-211406-8.
  10. Lendt, C.K. (1997). Kiss and Sell: The Making of a Supergroup. New York: Billboard Books. p. 294. ISBN 0-8230-7551-6.
  11. (2019). End of the Road World Tour Program, pg. 20.
  12. St. Petersburg Times, December 31, 1983
  13. Gates, Chuck (February 6, 1984). "'Kiss' was mediocre then - and still is". Salt Lake City: Deseret News. p. C5.
  14. Laycock, John (February 20, 1984). "New-look Kiss: same old sound". Detroit: The Windsor Star. p. D7.
  15. Gooch, Curt; Suhs, Jeff (2002). Kiss Alive Forever: The Complete Touring History. New York: Billboard Books. ISBN 0-8230-8322-5.
  16. North America show announcements:
    • Haldin, Ken (December 16, 1983). "Concert Groups Are Taking Holiday". Ocala Star-Banner. p. 1C. Retrieved December 10, 2021.
    • "Kiss Concert Set At Center". Columbus: Daily Times. January 20, 1984. p. 7. Retrieved December 10, 2021. Kiss, a popular heavy metal rock group which recently jettisoned its stage makeup, will perform in concert at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 19 at the Ohio Center here.
    • "Kiss in concert Sunday". Salt Lake City: The Deseret News. February 3, 1984. p. 2W. Retrieved December 10, 2021. Kiss - a heavy metal band with a penchant for raucous rock 'n' roll will perform in the Salt Palace Sunday at 7:30 p.m.

Sources

  • Gooch, Curt; Suhs, Jeff (2002). Kiss Alive Forever: The Complete Touring History. New York: Billboard Books. ISBN 0-8230-8322-5.
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