ANGEL magic with the music
“Sometimes people think that we’re the opposite of Kiss, you know, they’re black and evil and we’re white and good, that’s just not true,” the members of Angel told me with a look of concern on their faces. I told them I didn’t think it made much difference as long as their music was their own.
ANGEL magic with the music
“Sometimes people think that we’re the opposite of Kiss, you know, they’re black and evil and we’re white and good, that’s just not true,” the members of Angel told me with a look of concern on their faces. I told them I didn’t think it made much difference as long as their music was their own.
“Exactly,” they said, “but still we didn’t form this band to have those kind of comparisons made.”
The truth is that Angel is one of the new wave rock bands who, like Kiss, have decided that a theatrical approach to rock can enhance the band’s music and the audience’s good time without detracting anything. The Angel line-up, Punky Meadows, Gregg Guiffria, Frank Dimino, Barry Brandt, and Felix Robinson are trying for something different, however, than the fire and brimstone theatrics that has become the Kiss trademark.