Kiss continue their End Of The Road tour, next year on June 10 they will perform in Prague
Update: 5/12/2022 11:32 AM
Issued by: 5/12/2022, 11:32 AM
Prague – The American band Kiss will perform again in Prague next year on June 10. At the request of the fans, he will continue his End Of The Road tour, which he marked as his last – similar to The Farewell Tour from 2000 to 2002. Next year, Kiss will start the European part of their world tour in Prague’s O2 arena. The group will then continue with concerts in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Poland, France and Italy. Ondřej Pojzl informed ČTK about this on behalf of the organizing agency Live Nation.
“Everything we’ve built and conquered over the past four-plus decades would never have happened without the millions of people around the world who filled clubs, arenas and stadiums over the years. This will be the ultimate celebration for those who have seen us and last chance for those who haven’t seen us. On one final tour, we say goodbye to our biggest show to date and leave the same way we came… Uncompromising and unstoppable,” stated Kiss.
Ticket prices for the Prague concert range from 1990 crowns. Pre-sale will start on December 8, Pojzl said. After the performance in Prague, he plans concerts in Amsterdam, Brussels, Munich, Krakow, Dresden, Berlin, Lyon and at the Lucca Festival in Tuscany, he said. He will play in Mannheim and Cologne in July, he added.
Known for their simple and hard-hitting glam rock/hard rock music, slow motion faces, wild costumes and other antics, the band has sold more than 100 million albums since forming in 1973. The current lineup of Kiss includes guitarist Tommy Thrayer and drummer Eric Singer in addition to the original members, namely bassist and vocalist Gene Simmons and guitarist and vocalist Paul Stanley.
The quartet dressed up as a demon, a star boy, an alien and a cat ended with worldwide hits such as I Was Made for Lovin’ You, Beth, Do You Love Me or Rock and Roll All Nite.
They performed in the Czech Republic for the first time on December 14 and 15, 1996 in the sports hall at the Prague Exhibition Center. Last time this year on July 13 in Prague’s O2 arena.
For the communist regime in the former Czechoslovakia, Kiss were unacceptable not only because of their loud music, but also because of the logo with the runic two S’s evoking the uniforms of the Nazi SS units. However, according to music publicists, it is nonsense to suggest that Kiss has Nazi tendencies. Already because the two founding members are of Jewish origin.