On our first date, she was late. When we finally got to spend a bit of time together, she told me that she hadn’t wanted to meet me because she was having a hard time getting over her European boyfriend, Claude, who had gone back to Europe to marry his other girlfriend. The other girlfriend was pregnant by him, and he felt it was his duty. I would later see firsthand that even duty had its limitations.
For our second date, I arranged to take her to opening night at the Los Angeles Opera, together with Bob Ezrin and his wife, Fran. My assistant told me confidentially that Pam said she didn’t have anything appropriate to wear. “No problem,” I said. I arranged a fitting for a rented gown, the way celebrities often do for award shows.
For some reason, she wanted to meet me at my house rather than have us pick her up. Twenty minutes before the curtain was to go up, Bob, Fran, and I were looking at each other in my driveway, wondering where Pam was and whether we could possibly make the show. Still no Pam. Fran turned to me and said, “Is she always like this?” I shrugged. Finally Pam pulled up in her car. “I followed a car up the wrong road,” she said through sobs and tears.
Huh?
We all climbed into the limo, and the driver managed the impossible, getting us downtown in record time, just as the theater lights were going down.
As Pam and I began to socialize more together, we spent our time with her friends because I had so few of my own. But I didn’t think much of her friends. One was Marla Maples, whose claim to fame was breaking up Donald Trump’s marriage. Not exactly a pillar of society. But Pam had a very charitable attitude when she spoke of a number of other people I found questionable. “They have a good heart,” she would say.
“For what—a transplant?” I answered.
It’s not about how good your heart is, it’s about what you do with it during your life. These people were bad based on their actions and life experiences. To me, you can’t discount that by saying somebody has a good heart. Even so, I told myself I was in a realistic, normal relationship that could lead to marriage.
There was also a lot of drama in the relationship. Right from the start we constantly sent cards and letters back and forth about being alternatively disappointed or sorry and trying to explain things. The problems definitely went both ways. But I always thought I could fix whatever was wrong—with me and with her.
I want a relationship. I want marriage. I want a family.
I want a life out of a Norman Rockwell painting.
Then one afternoon in early 1991 Eric Carr called me at home. He had just gotten home from the doctor’s office. “What’s wrong?” I said.
“I spat up some blood, so I thought I’d go get checked out,” said Eric.
“Everything cool?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “But I’m really worried. They gave me some kind of scan and found a finger-shaped growth going in and out of my heart.”
“Did they say anything?”
“They said it could be cancer.”
“Nah, don’t worry about it,” I said. “Everything always seems worse than it really is. There’s no reason to think the worst-case scenario is the one that will happen. The chances that it’s serious are so small. And even if it’s cancer, you’ll get it taken care of.”
Unfortunately, a few days later he called me again. “It really is cancer,” Eric told me.
Worse still, it was an extremely rare form of cancer. The number of cases of heart cancer every year is in the single digits. But I still thought everything would be okay.
He left L.A. for a hospital in New York City, and Gene and I flew out to be with him during his open-heart surgery. As far as I understood it, they took part of his heart out and then reconstructed it with what was left.
Not long afterwards, we were asked to record “God Gave Rock ’n’ Roll to You” for the movie Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey—with Bob Ezrin producing, trying to capture some Destroyer-era magic and erase the memory of The Elder. Eric desperately wanted to work on the song, but he was still very frail. “You have to pay attention to your health now,” I told him, “whether that means recuperating on a tropical island or just resting and focusing on yourself.”
If I knew then what I know now—I never thought this might be his last chance to perform—I would have let him play, but at the time I was sure he would beat the odds. So Eric Singer played that session, though Eric Carr came to L.A. and sat behind the drums for the video shoot. He had lost all his hair from the cancer treatment and had to wear a massive wig to replicate his natural puffball. He played like a man possessed during the video shoot, duplicating Eric Singer’s parts in take after exhausting take.
“God Gave Rock ’n’ Roll to You” came out really well, and we decided to try to make another album with Bob Ezrin. When Bob is in top form, he’s hard to beat, and I think he wanted to prove something—he, too, was embarrassed about The Elder—and he wanted to buckle down and create a hard-edged, quality album. Hot in the Shade had been a hodgepodge; it was obvious the band was fragmented. If Gene was going to reengage and we could get back to doing what we did well, I was all for it.
We told Eric Carr that we were going to record an album without him. We assured him we would pay all of his bills and keep his insurance going. I reiterated that in the grand scheme of things, the band mattered little. He had to focus on doing whatever he could to get well, without compromise.
Bob brought in a bunch of drummers to rehearse with us as we started working on Revenge. We played with Aynsley Dunbar for a while, who’d done stints in Journey, Whitesnake, and the Jeff Beck Group, among many others. He was a great classic English drummer, but he just didn’t fit. At some point, we brought Eric Singer back. Whether you work in a band or at a factory or in any other kind of job, you have to work together with other people, and that connection affects the overall quality of the work as well as the atmosphere. As fate would have it, Eric Singer fit perfectly. He really was replacing Eric Carr in KISS—at least for a few months in the recording studio.
Throughout it all, I never considered the possibility that Eric Carr might die. I figured he’d be weak for a long time—that the status quo would go on and on. That was how I insulated myself and protected myself against the worst-case scenario.
I was wrong.
That fall of 1991, as we worked in L.A., I got a call from my friend Bob Held in New York. What he was trying to tell me was confusing. Eric Carr had suffered a stroke. The cancer had spread to his brain. He’d been found in his apartment after calling 9-1-1. When the emergency responders showed up, Eric was already unconscious, so they paged through his address book and randomly chose someone to call—which turned out to be Bob.
But from that moment on, we couldn’t get any information. His parents wouldn’t talk to me. I called daily, to no avail. I didn’t understand why nobody would talk to me—or to Gene, for that matter.
A few weeks later, on November 24, 1991, my assistant called me and said, “Eric is dead.”
I called Gene and told him the news.
It was shocking—partly because we hadn’t been able to get any information about his situation.
Gene and I flew to New York for Eric’s funeral. It was an open casket funeral, which was ghastly. The body in the casket, which was holding a set of drumsticks, didn’t look like Eric. It didn’t look like a human being. It looked like a mannequin. Eric’s girlfriend, a Playboy Playmate he’d been with for several years, briefly took the drumsticks out of the casket for some reason, and Eric’s fingers moved as she did.
The scent of flowers was overwhelming. You could barely breathe. But I could also smell hostility all around us—people bristling at our presence. Peter and Ace were there. Peter, who everyone knew resented and disliked Eric, tried to tell me that Eric had been calling him all the time. Nothing seemed to make sense. Eric’s girlfriend was also filled with anger at me and Gene. It turned out that Eric had painted us as the bad guys—he said we’d booted him out of the band and didn’t sup
port him, which simply wasn’t true. Everyone there seemed to have the impression that Eric had been cut off. But he hadn’t been cut off. Once we told him we were going to record Revenge, he cut himself off from us. I didn’t feel like the bad guy, and it was strange to be treated that way.
During the service, it was as if a switch had been thrown inside me, and I started sobbing uncontrollably—just bawling my eyes out.
In the wake of Eric Carr’s death, I continued to spend a lot of time wondering whether I had handled things correctly. Though I thought I had made the best choices at the time, I began to realize I’d been wrong. We had cut Eric off in perhaps the worst way, by denying him what mattered to him most—his place in KISS. That had been lost on me while we continued to do everything we thought was important, everything we thought we could and should do.
It was wrong to keep Eric from the thing he loved most, what for him was a lifeline. KISS. And I should have seen that, since the band functioned the same way for me, and I wasn’t even sick.
I should have known.
48.
A few months later, in January 1992, Pam threw a surprise fortieth birthday party for me at the Hollywood Athletic Club. I was caught totally off-guard and was thrilled to see a large turnout that included my parents, whom Pam had secretly flown out to L.A. She also hired a KISS tribute band called Cold Gin to play the party. Cold Gin had started to pack the Troubadour club doing classic KISS songs in makeup—at a time when tribute bands were not yet a big thing.
The guy playing Ace in the band was guitarist Tommy Thayer. I knew Tommy a little by then and had tried writing with him, too. He played the parts faithfully and knew every lick. I was impressed. He had clearly worked at learning those parts and put pride and persistence into it. It was also really fun for me to see a band doing what I no longer did.
Tommy told me that he had shifted his professional focus. Aside from the tribute band, he was mostly concentrating on producing and managing bands now. He didn’t want to be the oldest guy in a band still trying to make it, living with a stripper on Franklin Avenue. He didn’t want to be the oldest guy in the club, a sentiment I totally understood and that impressed me.
Listening to Cold Gin was also an interesting reminder that KISS had started out as a classic rock band. That early material sounded more like Humble Pie or the Who than the hair bands. It felt good to have Revenge in the bag, since it was a credible album on which we got back to doing what we did well. Music would always go through changes. We had thought that we weren’t current, but that had been a misjudgment. We didn’t need to chase trends; we needed to do what we did, and do it well.
Soon, we had to get ready to tour Revenge. Even though Eric Singer played on the album, we had never made any promises about his touring with us or, after Eric Carr’s death, joining the band. Now we had to decide what to do.
Gene and Bruce didn’t know Eric Singer as a person at all. They had crossed paths with him only for a few hours here or there in the recording studio. But I could vouch for Eric’s work ethic and his sense of responsibility as a result of working with him on my solo tour. Eric Singer had been a team guy when it mattered—during the long hours spent together on the road.
The next dilemma sounds silly in retrospect. Eric Singer had dyed blond hair back then, and Bruce, Gene, and I actually had a meeting to discuss whether we could deal with that. Everybody in the history of the band had had dark hair. Could we have a guy in KISS with blond hair?
Fuck it, we weren’t going to make a decision at this point in our lives based on the color of someone’s hair.
So Eric Singer—as Eric Carr had eerily predicted—became the new drummer in KISS. We rehearsed and played a few club gigs in April to break him in. One thing we quickly learned about Eric was that he also had an amazing voice. Even though he had toured with my solo band, I had no idea. As soon as we started rehearsing the classic material, Eric said, “Okay, which vocal parts do you want me to sing?”
I thought he was joking. Gene sang him a part. “Can you sing that?” It was too low. So Gene took that part and Eric tried a higher part. Eric was phenomenal at the high harmonies, and soon we shifted duties around so he was basically singing all of the high parts, which in KISS usually carried the main melody. I shifted down to one of the other parts. It was great, because it was tough to have to do it all—talk between the songs, sing the lead, and sing the main melodies of the harmonies, all night long. Having such a great background vocalist join the band was a godsend.
As we got ready to go to Europe for the first leg of the Revenge tour, I was planning to ask Pam to marry me. And when she became pregnant, I knew this was the time to ask. I bought a beautiful engagement ring. I picked the stone myself and had it set in a band designed to look like a vintage ring she loved. I was very excited when I got it, very excited when I asked her to marry me, and very excited when I went home in June and we prepared for our July wedding.
With Pam pregnant and our wedding day fast approaching, we finally went to a meeting with separate counsel to discuss a prenuptial agreement. I had insisted on the meeting because of the vast discrepancy between what we were coming into the marriage with—both monetarily and materially. By this time, I was happily paying virtually all of Pam’s bills. But I still wanted to try to come to an agreement at a time when goodwill prevailed. Not five minutes into the meeting, she ran from the room hysterical. I ran after her.
When I caught up to her, she told me that we could have the baby without getting married. She said she wanted nothing from me if things didn’t work out down the road. “Where I’m from,” she said, “your word is your bond.”
Overtaken by the fear of losing her completely, I told her I still wanted to get married—without any agreement.
A few days before the wedding, Pam miscarried. We were both devastated, but we went ahead as planned. Everybody at the wedding knew what had happened, and the air of gloom was undeniable. The silence in the face of sadness was all too familiar to me.
When KISS headed out on a full arena tour in October, Pam never seemed to know where I was or whether I had a show that day or a day off. I would call her, and she literally had no clue about where I was and what I was doing. I began to waver back and forth, sometimes wondering what I had gotten myself into and other times thinking I had to do whatever it took to make it work.
I can make anything work.
The European guy Pam had just broken up with when I first met her never stopped calling her, and she never stopped talking to him. Early on, Claude called her several times a week from Europe. I asked her why. I mean, I could understand his showing no respect for me or our marriage, but I didn’t understand why Pam didn’t seem to, either. Especially after I told her that the calls bothered me a lot and asked her to stop. She didn’t want to hear it. Making any concessions or adjustments wasn’t part of her concept of marriage. She saw anything like that as a loss of her freedom, as limiting her ability to be whomever she wanted, whenever and wherever she wanted.
Although it wouldn’t cure the core problem, I came up with what I thought was a sobering threat: “Why don’t I call Claude’s wife to see whether she knows you guys talk constantly, and see how she feels about it?” Pam looked at me with daggers. I was stifling her freedom, she said.
The contact didn’t stop, I would later learn—it just happened when I wasn’t around. I seemed to be back in a disappointingly familiar place—seeking approval or acceptance, and not getting it. Pam and I pushed each other’s buttons in a way that didn’t leave either of us happy. “You don’t let me be who I am,” she would say. “So you’ll never get to see the real me.”
We talked about issues like that until we were blue in the face. But I had chosen to be in the relationship. I had seen the signals from the beginning and chose to ignore them or dismiss them. I had no grounds for surprise now.
She went to Mexico at some stage to shoot a short-lived TV series called Land’s End, and I flew down during a
break in the tour. When I got there, I found a message from Claude on her hotel phone.
Come on!
The calls persisted, and my continued requests that Pam stop talking to him were met with more angry refusals. I felt like neither me nor our marriage meant much to her. Actions speak louder than words, and in this case the actions were speaking loudly.
Still, I wouldn’t quit.
We seemed to be at odds over just about everything, and I almost innately understood that our marriage was doomed. But I didn’t want to admit failure.
There must be a way to get this right.
49.
Once the Revenge tour ended at the end of 1992, KISS was in for an extended quiet period. The music industry landscape was changing dramatically, both because of grunge and because of a general downturn in the economy.
On the professional front, we spent the next two years on a couple of homegrown projects. Gene came up with the idea of a photo-heavy coffee-table book on the band, called KISStory, which Jesse Hilsen brilliantly suggested we create, print, and market ourselves. Gene also had the idea for a series of KISS conventions. For both projects, we turned to Tommy Thayer.
Tommy was from Portland, Oregon. His family owned office supply stores, and his father was a retired brigadier general. Tommy was bright and diligent, and despite tasting a little success with his first band, Black ’N Blue, he had moved on, cut his hair, and started working on the sidelines of the business. Tommy also loved KISS.
When work began on KISStory, Tommy started the months-long process of going through boxes and boxes of photos and clips in our archives. Not surprisingly, he bore down on the material. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of KISS, and in a pre-Internet era when every bit of minutia wasn’t readily available, his brain was a unique and genuine resource for a project like we had in mind.
Face the Music: A Life Exposed Page 29