DRESSED TO KILL

| Kiss

Cabbagescale

88.9%
  • Reviews Counted:9

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DRESSED TO KILL

Dressed to Kill is the third studio album by American hard rock band Kiss, released on March 19, 1975. It was produced by Casablanca Records president Neil Bogart, as the label's financial situation at the time did not permit the hiring of a professional producer. -Wikipedia

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  • Mike Ladano

    Dressed to Kill will always be fondly remembered for rocking and rolling us all nite, for the very first time.  

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  • All Music

    The songs have more of an obvious pop edge to them. The best-known song on the album by far is the party anthem "Rock and Roll All Nite  

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  • Rolling Stone

    If rock & roll intrigues you, though, you’d best be advised that for all the simplicity, overstatement and repetition within its records, Kiss does make fantastically successful rock. 

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  • Metal Excess

    As I said before, Dressed to Kill truly is what KISS was all about in those early years and it’s the most KISS-like of all their studio albums from the 1970s, if that makes any sense. 

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  • Poffy's Movie Mania

    2015 - There isn’t a dud track on the third KISS album, released in February 1975, exactly a year after their first album, and only four months after their second.  

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  • The Walleye

    2014 - The album cover alone is worth the purchase, right down to the embossed Kiss logo around the boys clad in their business suits.  

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  • Starling

    Any hope that Kiss would eventually be able to grow into something a little more respectful than a bunch of distalented crooks is effectively quenched with the release of their third album, easily the most tasteless and dumb record they'd released up to that time.  

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  • Don Ignacio

    At the very least, this album shows Kiss improving from their prior release in their instrumentation abilities, even though unfortunately I'd say the riffs they're playing aren't quite as catchy.  

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  • Robert Christgau

    It rocks with a brutal, uncompromising force that's very impressive--sort of a slicked-down, tightened-up, heavied-out MC5--and the songwriting is much improved from albums one and two.  

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