#288: Lick It Up
As a kid back in the 1500s I
remember reading how bands were formed.
I remember reading how John Paul Jones phoned Jimmy Page and asked him
if he was forming a band, and if so, did he need a bass player? Page said, sure, and mentioned how he was
checking out a drummer and singer that weekend and would get back to him. A rehearsal was set up and Led Zeppelin was
formed. Everyone got rich, famous and
laid. Queen simply formed itself; Kiss
placed an ad in the Village Voice and got Ace Frehley as a result. The Beatles were drawn together and bonded
over a steady diet of violence, music, alcohol and drugs in Hamburg (where John Lennon would regularly
berate his German audience, calling them “Fucking Nazis,” and Heiling Hitler
from the stage during shows). Bands were
shored up on a foundation of mutual respect, if not outright friendship, the
latter wasn’t always a requirement – as David Lee Roth once wrote about his
fractious relationship with Eddie Van Halen, “I don’t have to like you in order
to make beautiful music with you.” Hell,
the Everely Brothers, Don and Phil, haven’t spoken to each other for decades,
and there’s always that great story about how Don once kneed Phil in the balls,
on stage, and screamed, “That’s for fucking my wife!” Or perhaps it was Phil who kneed Don, perhaps
it never happened. Either way, it’s a
great story and perfectly illustrates the complexities of working with
another. Still, within the confines of
such relationships, memorable music more than often happens, and there is that
safety net of bouncing ideas off another person, which doesn’t always happen
when you work alone. Bowie once said, “The only thing wrong with
being me is that I can’t break up and release a solo album.”
The original and still the best. |
Along the way bands began to be
formed by committee and no longer was it a simple matter of, “Hey man, wanna
jam and form a band?” Contracts became
the name of the game, and as time passes the contracts became the norm. The bigger a band became the more arduous the
deal that was made. The classic case is
displayed below – Vinnie Vincent’s deal to enable him to join Kiss. And before anyone says, “Well, it is Kiss
after all,” consider these facts – the deal was struck in 1982. In 1982 Kiss were dead in the water. They’d lost one founding member in Peter
Criss, sacked in 1980 due to substance abuse and a general attitude
problem. Although the band would always
insist that Criss left to go solo, trust me, they fired his arse. They then hooked up with a new drummer – the
late, great Eric Carr – and made one of the worst selling albums they’d ever
release in Music From The Elder.
Personally I like that album, and anyone who says that it’s the worst
thing they ever did clearly hasn’t listened to the absolute pus that the band
would release a few years later – Animalize and Asylum anyone? As Winger or Cinderella albums they were
foul, as Kiss albums they weren’t scraping the bottom of the barrel, they
lifted the barrel, dug down deep into the shit below and found something past
that. The Elder wasn’t bad, songs like
The Oath and I were born Kiss anthems that should be played in concert, but, as
it didn’t sell, aren’t. Sadly some
people can’t differentiate between bad sales and bad music – just because
something doesn’t sell it does not mean its bad, conversely just because
something does sell, it does mean its good, otherwise we’d be living in a world
of Mitch Miller and Liberace. Jesus,
even Milli Vanilli sold millions and I defy anyone to tell me the value in that
crap.
Back to 1982. Kiss were a joke, and not a very good
one. They’d appealed to the comic book
pop culture youth of the 1970s, but those kids had grown up and left the band
behind. Guitarist, and frankly the soul
of the band, Ace Frehley was spiralling down into a land of booze, drugs, guns
and fast cars, ultimately realising that the longer he stayed in the band the
unhappier he was and the more self-destructive he’d become which made him fear
for his life. Gene Simmons and Paul
Stanley told acceded to his choice of standing out of the making of the next
album, Creatures Of The Night. Several
guitarists were auditioned, including Robben Ford and Steve Ferris (who would
later find fame as the guitarist for Mr Mister – yep, the guy who plays on Broken
Wings is the same guy who plays that steaming guitar on the title song,
Creatures of The Night – and I bet that’ll fuck with Pete The Stud’s head)
along with Eddie Van Halen, not that it was ever going to happen. Only one person fit the mould, Vinnie
Vincent, who’d also written some songs for the album. Vincent was duly hired after signing the
contract shown below. Ace Frehley
quietly left the band and promptly smashed his car into a tree.
On the surface of things it was a
marriage made in heaven. Vincent could
play guitar and, unlike Frehley, was more modern. Not that’s anything wrong with Frehley – I
still prefer him over anyone else the band has ever had and Vincent could
write. He sat down with Simmons and
Stanley and co-wrote the bulk of the album, Lick It Up, which marked the first
time that the band had appeared without make-up, a stance they’d continue until
the lure of filthy lucre got too much.
Well, I should say without make-up for the bulk of the time mainly
because in the mid 1980s Gene Simmons was wearing a combination of make-up and
a wig that made him look all the world like Bea Arthur on stage and trust me,
there is something wrong with that.
Instead of The Demon Gene Simmons became The Pansy and there he remained
until 1991.
You could argue that Vincent got a
good deal. To start with he was placed
on a salary which afforded him $2,000 per week – healthy cash in 1982. His benefits included travel expense while on
tour, which afforded him first class travel and a healthy per diem. He was also gifted at least three weeks paid
vacation per year. Prior to joining Kiss
his main claim to fame was working with Dan Hartman and appearing, sans
make-up, in the video for the disco song Instant Replay (I’m not making this up
– check for yourself, there he is, larger than life), and had stated that he’d
earned approximately $50,000 for his previous ten years as a professional
musician. It looked good, Vincent would
make more than that in six months. But
the contract, when you consider it, was a one-sided stacked deck. When the contract was boiled down it came to
this: among other things, Vincent was employed as an employee-for-hire as a
lead guitarist, that he would render recording services and perform on tour,
and that he would participate in recording and promotional functions on behalf
of and at the direction of KISS in exchange for a weekly salary and other
benefits. In return the band would provide Vincent with a character, costumes
and make-up design, but that likeness, “shall remain the sole property of KISS,
together with all representations thereof including, inter alia, photographs,
motion picture and television usage and material publicly disseminated or sold,
free from any claim, direct or indirect, by CUSANO or his heirs or
assigns.” It got worse, far worse. If Vincent left the band then he could not
state that he was a former member of the band, or that he was an employee of
Kiss, couldn’t use the make-up and could not perform any of the music that he
co-wrote while in the band. Ever. He could not perform with anyone else while
in Kiss (something that rankled Eric Carr who wanted to drum on Ace Frehley’s
first proper solo album). And that
wasn’t the end of it.
Vinnie Vincent no longer owned his
own music. Upon signing the contract he
handed over any rights to his own compositions, either solo or jointly. The relevant clauses stated that;
“Prior Compositions” - all musical
compositions (other than those musical compositions embodied on KISS's ‘Creatures
of the Night’ album which are subject to that certain co-publishing agreement
dated June 7th, 1982) written or co-written by CUSANO prior to commencement of
the Employment Term.” This clause affected
everything that he’d written before joining the band that hadn’t been
recorded and meant that Kiss now owned it all.
Upon signing the contract Vincent assigned all Right, Title and Interest
to each and every prior composition to Kiss.
Easy as that. If Kiss recorded
the song then they’d own 100% of that song.
If anyone else recorded the song by
September 1983 then Vincent would own the song, but, by virtue of the
contract, he wasn’t able to shop his music around. After that date, no matter what, Vincent
owned 50% and Kiss owned the other 50%, no matter who recorded the song, other
than, of course, Kiss, who would own 100% of the song if they recorded it.
"Term Compositions" - all
musical compositions written or co-written by CUSANO during the Employment Term
and/or the Production Term.” This would
cover anything written while he was in the band and under that clause Kiss
owned it all. If they recorded anything
after September 1984 then Vincent would be allowed to have 50%, otherwise suck
it up. He would be entitled to
royalties, but, in a great twist, Vincent had to appoint Kiss as his, “…true
and lawful attorney-in-fact to execute, verify, acknowledge and deliver any and
all instruments or documents which CUSANO shall fail or refuse to execute,
verify, acknowledge or deliver to effectuate the intent of this
paragraph.” You have to love that.
"Another Artist" - a
recording artist other than KISS or CUSANO in his capacity as a solo recording
artist.” This covered anything that
Vincent wrote that anyone else might want to record, but before anyone could
hear it he’d have to submit the demo to Kiss, who, if they decided they liked
it, could claim it, not record it and there it’d sit, forever, and forever
owned by Kiss. Mind you, as stated
earlier, he could not work or write with anyone without the express consent of
Kiss, and you can count on it that consent wouldn’t be forthcoming. Was it bad?
Bet on it. It got worse. “Publisher shall have the right to use the
name, photograph and likeness of Writer and biographical material concerning
Writer, for advertising, purposes of trade and otherwise without restriction in
connection of the Composition.” Vincent
no longer owned his own life.
The royalties weren’t anything
amazing. For each song published Vincent
got seven cents. For each retail sale he
got 5%, after taxes, tariffs, and discounts – the usual crap. That covered only the USA and Canada, for the rest of the world
he got 50% of any net sums earned and received – which would be 50% of fuck
all. Net means after all of the expenses
have been taken out, which generally leaves a debt. If a song book was released he’d get $1.00
per song for that, provided that the publisher paid up. If not, bad luck. And, in a great clause, “Publisher shall not
be required to pay royalties to Writer for public performance of the
Composition. Writer shall receive royalties for public performances front the
performing rights society with which Writer is or may, in the future, become
affiliated.” In fact there are more
paragraphs detailing how Vincent was not to be paid than there are how he would
be paid, if at all. As it stood when
Vincent filed for bankruptcy in the late 1980s the band offered him just over
$1,500 for complete control over his Lick It Up contributions, despite being
paid approximately $65,000 in royalties.
To put that into perspective, Sting reportedly earns $1,000USD a day for
Every Breath You Take. That’s right,
$356,000USD+ per year, for one song.
Vincent earned $65,000USD for album that he wrote all but one song on,
for a period that covered several years.
By 2009 Vincent still owed Kiss around $52,000 for his music. That’s right, he OWED them money, not the
other way around. How? Because he sold his publishing rights to Kiss
for a one-off payment of $50,000. He’ll
still make a bit of cash from his song writing royalties, but the true money is
in the publishing – just ask Michael Jackson (if you could) or Paul McCartney,
both of whom made millions, if not billions, off the backs of other musicians,
in Jackson’s case, it could be argued that he made more from the Beatles than
both Lennon and McCartney combined.
Then moral of the story? Not all offers are worth taking, not all
contracts are worth signing, and I’m not the least bit surprised that Vincent
has routinely sued Gene Simmons since the early 2000s, but, sadly, he has no
chance at all of winning.
Comments