A World Without Heroes

"A World Without Heroes" is a song by the American hard rock band Kiss. It is credited as being written by Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Lou Reed and Bob Ezrin, and was originally recorded and released on their 1981 album Music from "The Elder".[1]

Kiss performing "A World Without Heroes" in their 1981 video. Left to right: Gene Simmons, Eric Carr (on drums), Paul Stanley and Ace Frehley.
"A World Without Heroes"
Single by Kiss
from the album Music from "The Elder"
Released1981 (1981)
Recorded1981
StudioAce in the Hole, A&R Studios, & Record Plant, New York City
Length2:39
LabelCasablanca (NB-2343)
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Bob Ezrin
Kiss singles chronology
"Tomorrow"
(1980)
"A World Without Heroes"
(1981)
"I"
(1981)

Originally titled "Every Little Bit of Your Heart", the lyrics were changed in order to fit the concept of the album, which Lou Reed contributed the line "A world without heroes, is like a world without sun" to the lyrics.[2]

The song is a slow ballad which features Simmons on lead vocals and Stanley performing the guitar solo. It was released as the lone single from The Elder album and reached #56 in the U.S. and #55 in the UK.[3]

A video was made to help promote the single. It is the first to feature Eric Carr, and was the first Kiss video to be played on MTV.[4]

Despite the video and chart performance of the single, Kiss only played it live once during their appearance on the "Fridays" TV show and did not play the song live again until fan request at Kiss conventions in 1995 led them to performing an acoustic version on their Kiss Unplugged performance and subsequent album.

Cher's version

In 1991 Cher recorded a version of this song for her album Love Hurts with Richard Marx on backing vocals.

gollark: Not with a bang, or a whimper, but an `inet_aton()`.
gollark: However, they are to.
gollark: Suuuuuuure.
gollark: This is due to C bad, and linked lists being easier than an actually good datastructure.
gollark: Imagine having functions returning linked lists.

References

  1. KISS singles history
  2. Sharp, Ken. (July 19, 1996). "The Return of KISS - 'It's Time for Spectacle'". Goldmine #147.
  3. International Chart History
  4. Gooch, Curt and Jeff Suhs. KISS Alive Forever: The Complete Touring History. Billboard Books, 2002. ISBN 0-8230-8322-5
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.