Kiss is known for having a million greatest hits album and here we have another. This one is on the cheap side of things and is pretty basic. It is probably a label release and the band probably had zero to do with this one. It was released in 2008 by Mercury and UMe. It is called ‘Playlist Your Way’ and everything about it is cheap. The packing is a fold out cardboard that the CD is housed in. The cover has a big cutout and slipped in is a credit card size cardboard with a picture of the band on one side and a code on the other I believe to download some ringtones. This was 2008 and everyone wanted a ringtone so why not a Kiss one. The card could only be used in the U.S. and my copy was a sealed brand new release so the card was never used.
The CD has 14 tracks that range from the debut album up to ‘Hot in the Shade’. But no, there is not a song from every album in between. It is a random selection and it is basically the hits…well…except for “Uh! All Night”. I don’t really consider that one a hit or a good song. My buddy Michael Ladano reviewed this years ago and he thought it was strange that “Beth” was butted up against “Uh! All Night” and I would have to agree. The dynamics of those two songs sort of clash being side by side. While we are on the songs, let’s discuss them.
First up is “Rock And Roll All Nite” and surprisingly it is the ‘Dressed to Kill’ studio version and not the live version as it is on most comps. It is the rock anthem of rock anthem’s and you can hear those elements and that this song was bursting to be heard. The song came together because Neil wanted them to write an anthem or something for the fans to rally behind and this was the result…not bad!
“Lick It Up” is the band’s first single and first video without make-up and the song only went to #66. It opens with a nice little riff and a little scream from Paul. Paul’s second song on the album and it was meant for the radio. This is a pure 80’s, melodic rock song and no wonder it still gets played a lot. The video was so 80’s as well. Real cheesy and had the band in a post-apocalyptic world. It is a little comical watching it now. The song, however, is about a guy trying to talk his girlfriend in to doing the nasty so doesn’t really fit with the video.

The first song I heard from ‘the album’Creatures of the Night’, “I Love it Loud”. MTV played it a lot and every time it came on it was event TV for me. I actually remember having our little black & white TV in the dining room on at dinner one night because I knew the song was coming on. When it did, I stoped eating to watch and made everyone else watch it too. Ace was in the video and I thought Kiss was chugging along just fine. Plus, I loved seeing the Giant Tank stage and Eric was slamming away on those drums. The song was written by Gene Simmons and Vinnie Vincent and it was our first glimpse in to Vinnie as a song writer and it was awesome. This was such a heavy metal track and it was the Demon rejuvenated. A massive anthem despite the simple, somewhat stupid lyrics. I love the fade out at the end to then come back again for a few more pointless seconds. Not sure the need, but as a kid, I thought it was cool.
Then we get “Beth” which became one of the band’s biggest hits to date. It went all the way to #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was sung by Peter Criss. The song was one Peter had written prior to Kiss and written with guitarist Stan Penridge. The song is a ballad and played on piano with full backing orchestration by the New York Philharmonic. The song originally had the line “Beck what can I do” after the girlfriend of one of Peter’s bandmates in the band Chelsea. Of course, they changed to Beth which seem to work. The song was softly played and softly sung and was simply a beautiful song that was totally out of left field for the band up to this point.
It is the probably most vulgar song that Paul has done called “Uh! All Night”. Listen to the song to know what the “Uh!” means. It was written by Paul, Desmond and Jean who also plays bass on this one. I think this makes 3 non-Gene bass playing songs, but who’s counting. I think Paul took Gene’s playbook and tried to come up with the most absurd lyrics you can possibly imagine for a sexual driven song and he succeeded.
“Strutter” was from the debut album and was written by both Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons and over the years, this would be a rare experience as they would wind up writing songs by themselves. The music of the song was based off an old Gene song called “Stanley the Parrot” which was recorded even before there was a Wicked Lester. The song has a great opening drum fill by Peter and is an uptempo rock song that was inspired by all the sexy women in New York. There is a great bass riff by Gene why Ace belts out the solo. Paul sings the song and shows all the confidence a lead singer should show.

The next song was the first single off ‘Love Gun’ and it was “Christine Sixteen”. Now this song wouldn’t fly today as it is an older man going after a much younger woman at only 16. But at the time, no one thought anything about it. Heck, they did this before with “Goin’ Blind’ off the ‘Hotter Than Hell’ album. There is a cool piano riff in the song which was done by Eddie Kramer. It is a fun, upbeat track and a favorite of mine for Gene. A cool, fun fact about the song, the demo was done with Gene and two unknown artist at the time by the name of Eddie and Alex Van Halen.
The next song opens with a radio broadcast (the broadcaster is played by Gene Simmons) of the death of a driver killed in a car crash then segues in to the young man getting into his car and heading to the concert playing Kiss’s “Rock & Roll All Nite” on the radio. “Detroit Rock City” was so different than anything they had done prior, musically and lyrically. They took a chance shaking things up a bit and it worked. The song does mention Detroit, but is really about a young fan that is killed why he was on his way to a Kiss concert. The story is based off an actual event that occurred outside a Kiss concert in Charlotte where a fan was hit by a car and killed outside the arena. Knowing it is based a real life event adds a little extra to the impact of the song. The song normally bleeds in to “King of the Night Time World”, but here is just abruptly ends with a bad edit job.
“Hard Luck Woman”, was written by Paul and Paul had written so Rod Stewart could sing and when listening to the track, I could hear Rod singing this. Paul was talked in to giving it to Peter and although the song did do as well as “Beth”, it still gave the band another Top 20 hit. It is mostly acoustic and Peter does a great job and delivers a sweet song. I also think Peter’s vocals fit the song as they give it some grit and an extra added layer of emotion. A nice change of pace on an album such as ‘Rock And Roll Over’ that had a lot of rock songs.
“Deuce” was written and sung by Gene and he doesn’t even know what the song actually means. He just thought it sounded good…and he was right. The opening line, “Get Up and get your Grandma out of here” is the best opening line. This is one of those songs that live sounds so much cooler and has more grit, but this is still awesome. The guitar playing is fantastic and Ace plays a killer solo to end the song. Peter lays down some nice fills and gives the song a great fast tempo beat that drives the song along.

One of the band’s most iconic songs is “Love Gun”. That barrage of drum hits by Peter are so recognizable that the second you hear, you know what you are getting. When Peter does that barrage towards the end and then Ace comes in with a mini solo, it is magical. If the bass sounds a little different, that is because Paul handles those duties. The song is still played live today and at almost every show since its release. Paul has stated that the song was inspired by “The Hunter” by Booker T. & the MG’s but I believe performed by Albert King. The song does mention a “love gun”.
The second single off ‘Hot in the Shade’ became the band’s biggest hit since “Beth” going all the way to #8 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song was written by Paul Stanley and Michael Bolton. The Micheal Bolton who was giving us all those soulful ballads meant for old people. The song is “Forever” and features Paul and Bruce handling the acoustic guitars to open the track and Phil Ashley on keyboards. It is a power ballad and it is so sugary sweet, but I can live with it. It is also a cool moment for Eric has his playing is great as it is subtle enough yet he has a lot of little fills in it that give the song a little extra something.
The first single off ‘Dynasty’ was “I Was Made For Lovin’ You”. The song was written by Paul Stanley, Vini Poncia and the great Desmond Child makes his first of many appears with the band (only one on this album). The story goes that Disco was really big at the time and the record company wanted the band to be a little more commercial. Paul thought any idiot could write a disco song and a bet was made and a few hours later, the song was written and the Paul proved his point. The song went to #11 on the Billboard Hot 100. And as I mentioned earlier, the result was people thought this was a disco album. Wrong!! This song did have every trapping of a disco song, the tempo, the beat, the pop sound, the disco sound effects…I mean it was disco…but it was good and it was catchy and they still play it, but I still don’t know if I can give it full marks. Now on a side note, this is Gene’s least favorite song (and Peter and Ace hate it too).
And finally “Shout It Out Loud” comes exploding on to the scene with one of the bands biggest rock anthems and one that gets the crowd going at any show it is played. It was the first single off the album trying to capitalize off the success of the live version of “Rock and Roll All Nite” that was released previously. The title of the song comes from the Hollies song “We Want to Shout It Out Loud” which Wicked Lester demoed years earlier. The song is sung by both Paul and Gene and that chorus of “Shout it, Shout it, Shout It Out Loud” is pure rock gold. You hear it, you do shout it out loud.
And that is the compilation. The songs aren’t bad…well…except “Uh! All Night”, but it is only a snippet of their hits. It is most of the big ones, for sure, but there are so many great songs missing and so many albums not even touched. Hell, the band had so many albums, so many songs, a good or even great compilation is hard to do. There is no reason to buy this compilation unless you want a Kiss ringtone, but I doubt the card would even work now. This is for the collector like me, nothing more. My Overall Score is a 2.0 out of 5.0 Stars. It has flimsy packaging and done very cheaply so it doesn’t need any score higher than that.
The Kiss Review Series:
- Wicked Lester and the Progeny Demo Sessions (Bootleg)
- Kiss – Kiss (1974)
- Kiss – Hotter Than Hell (1974)
- Kiss – Dressed to Kill (1975)
- Kiss – Alive! (1975)
- Kiss – Destroyer (1976)
- Kiss – “Flaming Youth” 45 Promo Single – Bonus Edition (1976)
- Kiss – “Beth” – 7″ Single – Bonus Edition (1976)
- Kiss – Special Kiss Album For Their Summer Tour (1976)
- Kiss – The Originals (1976)
- Kiss – Rock & Roll Over (1976)
- Kiss – “Calling Dr. Love” – 7″ Single – Bonus Edition (1977)
- Kiss – Love Gun (1977)
- Kiss – “Christine Sixteen” – 7″ Single – Bonus Edition (1977)
- Kiss – Alive II (1977)
- Kiss – Double Platinum (1978)
- Kiss – Paul Stanley (1978)
- Kiss – Gene Simmons (1978)
- Kiss – Peter Criss (1978)
- Kiss – Ace Frehley (1978)
- Kiss – Best of Solo Albums (1978)
- Kiss – Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park Movie (1978)
- Kiss – Dynasty (1979)
- Kiss – “I Was Made For Lovin’ You” (1979) – 12″ & 7″ Singles (Bonus Edition)
- Kiss – Unmasked (1980)
- Peter Criss – Out of Control (1980)
- Kiss – Music From The Elder (1981)
- Kiss – Killers (1982)
- Kiss – Creatures of the Night (1982)
- Kiss – Lick It Up (1983)
- Kiss – Animalize (1984)
- Wendy O. Williams – WOW (1984) (Bonus Edition)
- Kiss – Animalize Live Uncensored (1985)
- Kiss – Asylum (1985)
- Kiss – “Tears Are Falling” 7″ Single (Bonus Edition) (1985)
- Kiss – Creatures of the Night (1985 Re-Issue)
- Vinnie Vincent Invasion – Vinnie Vincent Invasion (1986)
- Black N’ Blue – Nasty Nasty (1986)
- Ace Frehley – Frehley’s Comet (1987)
- Kiss – Exposed VHS (1987)
- Kiss – Crazy Nights (1987)
- Kiss – “Crazy Crazy Nights” – 12″ Single (Bonus Edition)
- Kiss – “Reason To Live” – 12″ Picture Disc (Bonus Edition)
- Kiss – Chikara (1988)
- Kiss – Smashes, Thrashes & Hits (1988)
- Kiss – Hot In The Shade (1989)
- Kiss – “God Gave Rock And Roll To You II” (1991) – 12″ Picture Disc
- Kiss – Revenge (1992)
- Kiss – Alive III (1993)
- Kiss – “I Was Made For Lovin’ You (Live)” (1993) – CD Maxi Single (Bonus Edition)
- Kiss – Konfidential VHS (1993)
- Kiss – Kiss My Ass: Classic Kiss Regrooved (1994)
- Kiss – MTV Unplugged (1996)
- Kiss – You Wanted the Best, You Got the Best!! (1996)
- Kiss – Greatest Kiss (1997)
- Kiss – Carnival of Souls: The Final Sessions (1997)
- Kiss – Psycho Circus (1998)
- Kiss – The Second Coming Documentary (1998)
- Eric Carr – Rockology (1999)
- Mark St. John – Mark St. John Project (1999)
- Eric Singer Project – ESP (1999)
- Bruce Kulick – Audiodog (2001)
- Kiss – The Very Best of Kiss (2002)
- Kiss – Kiss Symphony: Alive IV (2003)
- Kiss – The Best of Kiss: The Millennium Collection (1974-1982) (2003)
- Gene Simmons – Asshole (2004)
- Kiss – Rock the Nation 2004 World Tour: Instant Live (Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre Charlotte, NC 7/28/04) (2004)
- Kiss – The Best of Kiss: Volume 2 – The Millennium Collection (1982-1989) (2004)
- Kiss – Rock the Nation Live! DVD (2005)
- Kiss – Gold (2005)
- Kiss – The Best of Kiss: Volume 3 – The Millennium Collection (The 90’s) (2006)
- Kiss – Alive! The Millennium Concert (2006)
- Kiss – Kiss Alive! 1975-2000 Box Set (2006)
- Paul Stanley – Live to Win (2006)
- Kiss – Kissology: Volumes 1 to 3 (2006-2007)
- Kiss – Jigoku-Retsuden (2008)
- Kiss – Ikons (2008)
- Kiss – Playlist Your Way (2008)
- Kiss – Sonic Boom (2009)
- Kiss – Monster (2012)
- Kiss – The Casablanca Singles 1973-1982 (2012)
- Kiss – Kiss 40 (2014) – 2 CD Set
- Kiss – Kiss 40 (2014) – Japanese Edition
- Kiss – Kiss Rocks Vegas (2016)
- Kiss – Kissworld: The Best of Kiss (2017)
- Kiss – Off the Soundboard: Tokyo 2001 (2021)
- Kiss – Off the Soundboard: Live in Virginia Beach July 24, 2004 (2022)
- Kiss – The Albums Ranked From Worst to First (2021)
- Kiss – Destroyer: 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (2021)
- Kiss – Destroyer: 45th Anniversary 2-LP Deluxe Edition (Colored Vinyl) (2021)
- Kiss – Creatures of the Night: 40th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition (2022)
- Kiss – Creatures of the Night: 40th Anniversary 3-LP Deluxe Edition (Colored Vinyl) (2022)
- Kiss – Off the Soundboard: Poughkeepsie, NY Mid Hudson Civic Arena, November 28, 1984 (2023)
- Kiss – Icon (2010 / 2023)
- Kiss – Lick it Up (40th Anniversary Picture Disc) (2023)
The Bootleg Series:
- Kiss – ‘Accept No Imitations’ (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (ASYLUM TOUR)
- Kiss – Look Wot You Dun to Me (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (CRAZY NIGHTS TOUR)
- Kiss – The Summer of Satan: The Devils Ride Out! (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (DESTROYER TOUR)
- Kiss – Return to Capital Center (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (DYNASTY TOUR)
- Kiss – With Fire & Thunder (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (HOTTER THAN HELL TOUR)
- Kiss – Northhampton PA March 19th, 1975 (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (DRESSED TO KILL TOUR)
- Kiss – The Hottest Show On Earth (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (THE HOTTEST SHOW ON EARTH TOUR 2010)
- Kiss – All the Way to the Ball Room (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (Australian Tour 1995)
- Kiss – Kiss of Thunder (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (The Rising Sun Tour 2006)
- Kiss – Agora Ballroom 1974: The Cleveland Broadcast plus Bonus Cuts (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (THE KISS TOUR)
- Kiss – Hotter Than Hell: Radio Broadcast 1976 (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (ROCK & ROLL OVER TOUR)
- Kiss – The Tickler (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (LICK IT UP TOUR 1983)
- Kiss – Barbarize (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (ANIMALIZE WORLD TOUR 1984 – North American Tour)
- Kiss – They Only Come Out At Night (Bootleg Series) – Album Review (ANIMALIZE WORLD TOUR 1984 – EUROPEAN TOUR)
- Wicked Lester and the Progeny Demo Sessions (Bootleg)
- Kiss – Black Diamond: Lafayette Music Room, Memphis, TN April 18th, 1974 – FM Broadcast
- Kiss – End of the Road: In Allentown 2020 (PPL Center, Allentown, PA, 4th February 2020) (End of the Road Tour) – Blu-Ray
- Kiss – ‘Monster Tour: Simpsonville 2013’ (Charter Amphitheatre at Heritage Park, Simpsonville, C – 13th August 2013) – Blu-Ray
- Wicked Lester – The Original Wicked Lester Sessions (Bootleg)
- Kiss – The Ritz on Fire (August 12, 1988, The Ritz, New York City. A radio broadcast – Crazy Nights Tour)
- Kiss – Kiss My Axe 1978: Live from the Los Angeles Forum in California, August 25, 1977 (Love Gun Tour)
- Kiss – Gods of Thunder: The Legendary Concert Broadcast – Sao Paulo, August 27, 1994′
- Kiss – Black Diamond: Lafayette Music Room, Memphis, TN April 18th, 1974 – FM Broadcast (Alternate Cover)
- Kiss -Alive! in Amityville: June 1973 – (2021)
- Kiss – Set the World On Fire: Live (10 CD Box Set – Radio Broadcasts 1974-1994)
- Kiss – Diamonds in the Dust (2022)


Oddly enough, now whenever I think of “Beth,” I think of the 1996 movie ‘Beautiful Girls’ where Michael Rapaport’s character is crying while cleaning his ex-girlfriend’s driveway that was covered in snow (because of him lol).
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Nice in depth review John. I bet I have not played it since I reviewed it in 2012. When I think I gave it -500/5 stars or something ridiculous. LOL
Interesting packaging, and it’s always fun to see what tracks the suits pick for any given comp!
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My question is: Why did you only put the ballads here when there were some great KISS rockers?
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