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04-15-2010, 06:34 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Hermitage, PA | | | Guess Gene Simmons isnt as dumb as everyone thinks......
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Interesting interview of his I found recently. Quote:
May 1st brings not only the Band Holiday Weekend, but it also heralds the begining of the KISS UK headline arena tour in support or their current album SONIC BOOM.
When the guys were in the UK recently on a promotion trip in support of the album and the announcement of the tour dates, we took the opportunity to sit down and have a chat with bassist Gene Simmons about his bass playing career, influences and set up...
RR UK: So, Did you start playing the bass first, was that your first instrument?
Gene: No, my first instrument was guitar, self taught and I did it like anybody else in the prehistoric days- we took albums, which went 33 rpm, and we slowed them down. So grrrrrr rrrrr [sound of slowed down record],like that. But then I could pick up the notes and the chords and copy them, and then try to play along with them, but of course when the record sped up to full speed it changed, didn't it, the tonality went up! Ha! But in either case that's how I learned how to play guitar, and then of course meeting other guitar players who showed me voicings and Sus4 and so on. And then, I saw the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show and thought 'gee, this is a good job, girls scream, you get to dress funny, wear your hair kinda kooky', and that was it it, it's better than being a plumber. So I wanted to do that and then I noticed when I first went out meeting other guys in other bands, there were a million guitar players but no bass players. So I decided to pick up the bass, because I'd get into a band easier.
RR UK: So when you're talking about going back and playing over records that you liked, trying to play those, what kind of artists were you trying to mimic back then and learn the parts to?
Gene: Gee there was a lot of stuff, a lot of R n� B records you know- Otis Redding, Stax Vault, Sam and Dave records, things like that. Turned out to be a guy named Steve Cropper mostly, in the Mar-Keys and the House Band, Booker T and The MGs, was all Steve Cropper. Steve Cropper and Otis Redding actually co-wrote 'Respect' and first recorded it, and then it was recorded by Aretha Franklin. And when you hear 'Soul Man' [hums tune] that's all Steve Cropper- before your time [laughs]. And so those were the original guys that I learnt from, and then of course from listening to the British groups, to hear a major A chord from Pete Townsend or somebody like that teaches you the basics of guitar, and learning to play guitar early on was actually a help in writing songs; of course you can be a bass player and write songs but by knowing guitar a little bit you can actually write the parts.
RR UK: So how old were you, say, when you first picked up a guitar?
Gene: I was 14, and I remember immediately write my own songs. [sings] 'My uncle is a raft, and he al-ways keeps me floating, he is so good to me, he treats me tenderly, it doesn't matter who you are, My uncle is a raft'. I was just throwing words up and writing everything, and originally it was it sort of Bonzo Doo Dah band. You should look this band up, it's an English band in the early sixties but eclectic initially. I listened to everything, R'n'B, Beatles and stuff, and then really started to hone in on the early great sixties anglo bands, I'm a big anglophile. One listen to 21st century Schizoid man, by... you don't know what I mean, right?
RR UK: 21st Century Schizoid man- rings a bell but I couldn�t tell you who it's by off the top of my head
Gene: Look it up. [We did- King Crimson, Ed.] Just great stuff. So much great stuff. Thunderclap Newman produced and written by Pete Townsend. There were so many... there must have been thousands of British bands, yes The Beatles, yes the 'Stones, Kinks, Zombies, Hollies, ah Searchers, Fortunes, Tremalos, Sounds Incorporated, a million of them, Jerry and The Pacemakers, and on and on, thousands and thousands of bands, and I devoured all of them. And there's some new English groups that are really interesting- Keane write good songs, Arctic Monkeys write good pop songs. The problem is they're not stars. You don't have a clue what their names are, and you don't care what they ate for breakfast or who they're shagging. And a star is what Elvis Presley is, yes you like the songs but you either want to **** him or you want to find out who or what he�s doing. That's the sign of a star. And if you're in Kasabian or anything else, and you can't tell me who's in the band, and people on the street don't know you're in a band, you're not a star. A star is bigger than what he does. Even the people who hate you are curious about you as a personality, that's a star.
RR UK: That's very true. So how old were you when you started playing the bass then?
Gene: Fifteen.
RR UK: Fifteen, so you'd been playing guitar for about a year. Do you remember the first bass that you bought or was bought for you?
Gene: My mother bought me a Kent bass, which was like a copy of McCartney's Hofner, like a violin body. A white Kent bass. Cheap, 35 dollars. But it played.
RR UK: And how long were you playing that bass for?
Gene: I played that bass [thinks] for probably three years.
RR UK: So it stood you in good stead then...
Gene: Oh yeah. I played it through The Missing Links, and The Long Island Sounds, these are bands that we had, and Cathedral. And then I got an EB1, which was a bass guitar made from, kind of a Gibson offshoot. And of course that was stolen.
RR UK: So you mentioned some bands there then, so one you'd got your bass you started playing in some bands- tell us a little bit about some of the bands that you were playing in before you had Kiss.
Gene: The bands mostly played high school dances, and it was a way to get chicks; to allow you to.. you know... [laughs] When you're a teenager you hope that she'll let you take her down to the laundry room and see what colour her bra is, you know, and all that naughty stuff. And of course if you were in a band you could pretty much do anything that you wanted to, versus a pre med student- they just wouldn't get any. If you play guitar in a band, that skirt comes right up. It exists today; of course it doesn't exist with synth bands... do Franz Ferdinand get laid? I don't think they're that kind of band.
Sami: How many bands would you say that you played in towards, eventually, Kiss?
Gene: About five; it was Long Island Sounds, Missing Links, Cathedral, I'm embarrassed to say Bullfrog Beer, which was a college band although I never drank and never got high, and then Wicked Lester, and then finally Kiss.
RR UK: So were some of those more in line with your early inspirations, or were they rock bands?
Gene: No. The early bands were kind of a mixture of everything, we did Otis Redding, Aretha Franklin, to instrumentals by The Ventures, to Sander Sham and the Farrels- very obscure stuff- 'Brown Eyed Girl' by Van Morrison... and then we all tried to do Beatles stuff, and in the band I was the singer. Of course I had a much higher voice then...
RR UK: You mentioned that you were self taught, did you ever have any theory lessons? Did you learn how to read music or any of that stuff?
Gene: No. I can't read a stick of music, I've written hundreds of songs, I've had them covered by Lenny Kravitz and Stevie Wonder, and Cher, and almost anybody that you care to mention, but I couldn't tell you if you wrote it down on a sheet of paper, and neither could Lennon and McCartney or Jagger and Richards, or Jimmy Hendrix- they couldn't read or write music. But they could write songs.
RR UK: So when you think back over all the people who've endorsed you over the years, can you remember what guitar and bass companies have endorsed you over the years?
Gene: I haven't taken the endorsing route too much. I was involved with Ampeg amplifiers for a while, but what I do instead is manufacture and sell my own guitars. I am the guitar company and I am the creator- the Gene Simmons axe is a massive success. They go for 5000 dollars a piece, each one is numbered and signed and so on, but I actually own the trademark. Guitar players call their instruments the axe, I play my axe, but I'm the only one who actually owns the phrase!
RR UK: So what's your rig onstage, what's your set up?
Gene: Um, I have my Punisher or Axe basses, which I manufacture and sell, and usually there are four Ampegs - SVTS- they usually stick out anywhere, from 200 to 300 watts RMS- and if we're playing outdoors a few of them will be connected. And a combination of Cabinets, some of the cabinets have 8 10 inch speakers, then I have another cabinet with 4 12 inch speakers, and another one with 2 18 inch speakers. So it's a big, big sound.
RR UK: So how often do you practice, both when you're on the road and just at home?
Gene: Hardly ever. I mostly pick up a guitar and doodle, and sometimes things come out of it, or on piano, just doodle and see what happens.
RR UK: What tips would you give any kids out there who're picking up a guitar or bass?
Gene: Steal. Take a lick, check it twice, find out if it's naughty or nice, turn it upside down, play it backward. You know 'Sunshine Of Your Love'? If you do it backwards it's your riff. Play it backwards, tear the middle of it upside down, inside out, and by Frankensteining your way though it, take a piece from here and a piece from there, you create your own. I mean, what is cooking except taking things that everybody's been using all along and just making your own mixture. 'I'm a creator...?'- you create nothin! Salt and pepper have always been here, and you take chicken and vegetables, there's nothing original about it. So when you listen to The Beatles, totally original. No, it's not. They took Carl Perkins' kind of songwriting abilities, and stuck in some Chuck Berry and some Little Richard, and they covered everybody's songs, and Motown and Everly brothers harmonies, and when you see the elements, the DNA that makes it up, you see that this 'Beatle body' is made up of bits and pieces of all of American music. But when it comes out as The Beatles, it's a brand new thing. [In Liverpool accent] Y'know what I mean?
RR UK: [Laughs] Yeah I know what you mean. Final question- what would you say are your top riffs ever, that you�ve heard and have just blown you away?
Gene: Riffs that I've written, or other people?
RR UK: Other people.
Gene: Well by some estimates, 'Smoke On The Water' is the most often played riff by all guitar players, new guitar players certainly...um...but I'm a major Jeff Beck fan. When he had his 'Truth' and 'Beck-ola' albums... Top riffs? Jeff Beck, 'Plynth'. Uh, Mountain- 'Never In My Life', 'Satisfaction' by the 'Stones- it's undeniable, as soon as it starts, the song's there, it's undeniable.
| Nice to hear him talk music for once. Also, he clearly does know how to read and write music, but he loves to bill himself as having made this success solely on his own guns. Also find it a bit odd that the interviewer didnt know that 21st Century Schizoid man was by King Crimson.  | 
04-15-2010, 06:43 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Texas | | He could have been using a stand-in, as he does on the records.  | 
04-15-2010, 06:44 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Hermitage, PA | | Quote:
Originally Posted by waynobass He could have been using a stand-in, as he does on the records.  |
That's actually not true. In the 80s, he actually did have a couple play ghost but all they played on those records were roots and 8ths because he was busy with movies. Gene played on all the songs that really matter, during the 70s and early eighties.
I get your sarcasm though.  | 
04-15-2010, 06:46 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2009 Location: Joao Pessoa, Brazil | | | Wow, Gene Simmons listened to King Crimson AND plays bass too? Impressive!
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04-15-2010, 06:48 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Hermitage, PA | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Marco A. Mayer Wow, Gene Simmons listened to King Crimson AND plays bass too? Impressive! |  | 
04-15-2010, 08:33 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Farmingdale NY. | | | he's an underrated player. not flashy, but he writes solid ,melodic, hooky parts. | 
04-15-2010, 08:38 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Chicago Suburbs | | | I've never heard anyone say on TB that Gene was "dumb." | 
04-15-2010, 08:42 PM
|  | Registered User Endorsing Artist: Blackout Effectors | | Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Chicago, IL | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Noseferatu Also, he clearly does know how to read and write music |
Not trying to start drama, but he actually says he can't read and by extension write music.
"Gene: No. I can't read a stick of music, I've written hundreds of songs, I've had them covered by Lenny Kravitz and Stevie Wonder, and Cher, and almost anybody that you care to mention, but I couldn't tell you if you wrote it down on a sheet of paper"
He can write songs for sure, but not the musical notation of it...just sayin.  | 
04-15-2010, 08:45 PM
| | | | gene simmons doesn't care about our stupid opinions | 
04-15-2010, 08:52 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Hermitage, PA | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Ron Now Not trying to start drama, but he actually says he can't read and by extension write music.
"Gene: No. I can't read a stick of music, I've written hundreds of songs, I've had them covered by Lenny Kravitz and Stevie Wonder, and Cher, and almost anybody that you care to mention, but I couldn't tell you if you wrote it down on a sheet of paper"
He can write songs for sure, but not the musical notation of it...just sayin.  | I know that's what he says, but he always says that to make it look like he's some big shot for having got this far without reading music. I believe he and Paul Stanley both can read music. I remember reading something in one of their books about them composing a bunch of their songs on staff paper. Also, he mentions SUS4 and major and minors and clearly knows chord names and stuff. | 
04-15-2010, 09:00 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: University Place, WA | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Noseferatu I know that's what he says, but he always says that to make it look like he's some big shot for having got this far without reading music. I believe he and Paul Stanley both can read music. I remember reading something in one of their books about them composing a bunch of their songs on staff paper. Also, he mentions SUS4 and major and minors and clearly knows chord names and stuff. | GENE SIMMONS IS A LIAR! 
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04-15-2010, 09:03 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Hermitage, PA | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Burlington GENE SIMMONS IS A LIAR!  |  | 
04-15-2010, 09:04 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Eastern Wisconsin | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim C. I've never heard anyone say on TB that Gene was "dumb." | Gene was dumb.
Gene is dumb.
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04-15-2010, 09:16 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2010 Location: Chicago Suburbs | | Quote:
Originally Posted by M0ses Gene was dumb.
Gene is dumb. |  | 
04-15-2010, 09:35 PM
|  | Remember 12/21/2012! ...it's my birthday! | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Cheviot, OH | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Noseferatu Interesting interview of his I found recently.
Nice to hear him talk music for once. Also, he clearly does know how to read and write music, but he loves to bill himself as having made this success solely on his own guns. Also find it a bit odd that the interviewer didnt know that 21st Century Schizoid man was by King Crimson.  | Contrary to what you have posted, the vast majority of not just TB'ers, but society in general thinks of him as a very intelligent person and excellent business man. Only when he is compared to solo wankers like Wooten and Jaco do his bass skills become suspect, and even then the arguments are dull and pointless.
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04-15-2010, 09:52 PM
|  | It's time for Dodger baseball! | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Mentone Beach | | | Sander Sham and the Farrels? Oh yeah, they did Willy Billy!
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04-15-2010, 10:06 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Houston, Texas | | Quote:
Originally Posted by leegreenman he's an underrated player. not flashy, but he writes solid ,melodic, hooky parts. | Don't quote me on this, but I've heard others on here say that Ace wrote his basslines for him. Not sure if thats true or not, but I can't say I've really seen Gene do much outside of KISS after they stopped making new music.
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04-15-2010, 10:10 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2010 Location: richmond.bc | | Quote:
Originally Posted by williamk gene simmons doesn't care about our stupid opinions | Not true at all. He's highly intelligent and will figure out a way use our opinions to make money.
I toured with one of his former roadies who described him as "barely human" though and I'd buy that.
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04-16-2010, 09:01 AM
| | Registered User Endorsing: Ampeg | | Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Apopka, FL | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr_Sore_Fingerz Don't quote me on this, but I've heard others on here say that Ace wrote his basslines for him. Not sure if thats true or not, but I can't say I've really seen Gene do much outside of KISS after they stopped making new music. | oh, you mean last year? they just put out a new album called "sonic boom." and ace has been in and out of kiss for such long periods that it would be impossible for ace to write all his basslines.
there is a name for the stuff you heard...falsehoods. you don't sing and play like gene without having a little something on the ball.
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04-16-2010, 09:03 AM
| | Registered User Endorsing: Ampeg | | Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Apopka, FL | | Quote:
Originally Posted by steamthief Sander Sham and the Farrels? Oh yeah, they did Willy Billy! | i know sander sham! but not the farrels. we're usually the farrels when he's on a show with us.
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