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Detroit Rock City - Bob Ezrin, Kiss, Jay Messina, Corky Stasiak
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King Of The Night Time World - Bob Ezrin, Kiss, Jay Messina, Corky Stasiak
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God Of Thunder - Bob Ezrin, Kiss
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Great Expectations - Bob Ezrin, Kiss
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Flaming Youth - Bob Ezrin, Kiss
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Sweet Pain - Bob Ezrin, Kiss
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Shout It Out Loud - Bob Ezrin, Kiss, Jay Messina, Corky Stasiak
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Beth - Bob Ezrin, Kiss, Jay Messina, Corky Stasiak
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Do You Love Me - Bob Ezrin, Kiss, Jay Messina, Corky Stasiak
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Rock And Roll Party - Bob Ezrin, Kiss
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With their 1976 album Destroyer, the band's fifth release in two years, Kiss began to expand their fan base by shedding a bit of their edge and taking on a more melodic, less menacing image. The Peter Criss ballad "Beth", written for the drummer's wife, is the most sentimental love ballad the group ever recorded, and songs like "Detroit Rock City" and "Shout It Out Loud" had the kind of arena-rock punch that kept subscriptions to the Kiss Army at an all-time high. Despite, or perhaps because of, the blatantly commercial direction the band seemed to be heading in, 1976 was the most creatively rewarding period in its lengthy career. In addition to releasing Destroyer, the band pumped out the equally touted album Rock and Roll Over, which included the pounding "Take Me" and the groovin' "Calling Dr Love". The only finer year was 1978, when the band starred in the classic B-grade flick Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park. --Jon Wiederhorn
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