Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons Slam ‘Cancel Culture,’ Call It ‘Dangerous’
Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons broached the topic of “cancel culture” during a KISS VIP event in Austin, Texas on September 29.
In the video below, Simmons was asked by a host of the Star Wars podcast The Bombadcast if he was a fan of the Disney+Ā seriesĀ The Mandalorian, since he was a fan of the Star Wars saga. He responded saying it’s “one of the best shows on TV.” When asked what he thought of the show’s second season, he added, “They should have kept the chick, even though she had different political [views]. It’s not about politics; it’s about whether you’re a good actress.”
“The chick” in question is Gina Carano, who played Rebel Alliance soldier Cara Dune. Carano was fired from the series in February after she shared a post to social media that was interpreted as comparing the treatment of conservatives in the United States to the treatment of Jews in Nazi Germany.
Carano’s post read, “Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neighborsā¦even by children. Because history is edited, most people today donāt realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views.”
Stanley added, “Look, political views⦠This whole ‘cancel culture’ is so dangerous. The idea that people can’t speak their mind. That’s what freedom is all about. And to lose your job because you’ve got something to say ā even if I find it offensive ā that’s… we’ve gotta look at that. Plus, she can kick my ass.”
Rockās Greatest Live Albums: Top 40 Ranked
40. Billy Joel – āSongs In The Atticā (1981)
ShareBilly Joel made excellent records in his early career, but nearly every song on this collection (recorded at various venues on his 1980 tour) sounds better live. The single LP was so packed he didnāt even bother to include āPiano Man.ā
39. Yes – āYessongsā (1973)
ShareProgressive rock at its finest. This triple (!) live LP came on the heels of the only two albums recorded with the bandās best lineup (Chris Squire on bass, Jon Anderson on vocals, Bill Bruford on drums, Steve Howe on guitar and Rick Wakeman on keyboards) -- āFragileā and āClose To The Edge.ā But Bruford quit at the beginning of the tour, so most of this album features Alan White, whose playing was much better suited for the arenas that Yes was now headlining.
38. The Kinks – āOne For The Roadā (1980)
ShareThe classic version of āLolaā comes from this live album, and that alone earns it a spot on this list.
37. Thin Lizzy – āLive And Dangerousā (1978)
ShareLike a lot of other albums on this list, thereās at least a bit of post-production sweetening here, but the final result is one of the greatest albums -- āliveā or otherwise -- in ā70s hard rock.
36. Rush – āExit⦠Stage Leftā (1981)
ShareComing off of their best album, 1981ās āMoving Picturesā was the perfect time for Rush to show off their live prowess; the heavy prog rock band somehow went from cult phenomenon to arena headliners. The album was so packed with classics that even āLimelightā (a song from āMoving Picturesā that was an ode to playing live) didnāt make the album, despite being a recent radio hit. Neil Peartās drum solo in āYYZā is so iconic, many fans who arenāt even drummers know it by heart.
35. Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers – āThe Live Anthologyā (2009)
ShareFor some reason, Petty never had a definitive live album, but this collection, with performances from 1978 through 2007 is an amazing collection that shows that Petty and the Heartbreakers were one of the best live bands in the ā70s, ā80s, ā90s and the ā00s.
34. Neil Young & Crazy Horse – āLive Rustā (1979)
ShareAs the ā70s came to a close, punk rock bands were making the hippies from the ā60s look obsolete. Neil Young was an exception and this raging, roaring live album with Crazy Horse shows why: on songs like āHey, Hey, My, My (Into The Black)ā and āSedan Delivery,ā they play as furiously as the Sex Pistols. Not that they left psychedelic jams in the past: āCortez The Killerā and āLike A Hurricaneā were improvisational gems, and Young still was great at playing solo folk, as he demonstrated on āSugar Mountainā and āI Am A Child.ā
33. Lynyrd Skynyrd – āOne More From The Roadā (1976)
ShareIf you never had the opportunity to see Lynyrd Skynyrd during Ronnie Van Zantās lifetime (and letās give props to Johnny Van Zant, who has done a great job fronting the band for decades), this is the closest that youāll get. They released this after having only three studio albums, which gave them more than enough material for a double live album. Besides showing off their southern pride on āāTā For Texasā they also provied themselves to be blues-rock equals of their idols in Cream on Robert Johnsonās āCrossroads.ā And of course, this album has the definitive -- āWhat song is it you want to hear?ā -- āFreebird.ā
32. Janis Joplin – āThe Woodstock Experienceā (1998)
ShareRecorded at the Woodstock festival in 1969, Joplin performed ten hours later than scheduled, and partially due to that, she wasnāt as transcendent as she was at her Monterey Pop Festival performance a few years earlier. But Jopin at less than full power is better than most artists on their best night, as evidenced here. Robert Plant, Steven Tyler, Ann Wilson and Axl Rose are among the singers still carrying Joplinās influence today.
31. Ozzy Osbourne – āRandy Rhoads Tributeā (1987)
ShareRecorded in 1980 and 1981 during Ozzyās first tours as a solo artist. His two albums with his original guitarist Randy Rhoads (who tragically died in a plane crash in 1982) held up to his earlier material with Black Sabbath, and his live band (Rhoads, bassist Rudy Sarzo and drummer Tommy Aldridge) packed almost as much of a punch as Sabbath. Someone send this (along with āBlizzard of Ozā and āDiary of a Madmanā) to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame voters, already: Randy Rhoads needs to be inducted.
30. The Runaways – āLive In Japanā (1977)
ShareItās a rough and ragged live album, and thatās appropriate: weāre talking about the Runaways here. Opening with āQueens Of Noiseā (a theme song of sorts), they owned iconic songs like the Velvet Undergroundās āRock and Rollā and the Troggsā āWild Thing.ā And their own classic, āCherry Bomb,ā holds its own against those two timeless jams.
29. Queen – āLive Killersā (1979)
ShareIn the ā80s, Queen kept cranking out pop singles, but by the end of the ā70s, they were still very much a rock band and thatās on full display here. While the critics didnāt love the album, they didnāt get Queen anyway, and for years, this was the only authorized documentation of a Queen concert.
28. Iron Maiden – āLive After Deathā (1985)
ShareIn 1984, when this album was recorded, Maiden was graduating to arena-headlining status, and they did it without having to rely on hit singles: they were the rare band to achieve that kind of popularity without having to hear complaints of āselling out.ā It might have been hard to imagine them headlining such big venues with original singer Paul DiāAnno, but Bruce Dickinson, who had fronted the band for three studio albums at this point, had the voice and the presence to deliver Maidenās metal to the largest venues imaginable (and they still play to enormous crowds today, particularly overseas).
27. The Rolling Stones – āGet Yer Ya-Yaās Outā (1970)
ShareThis album, recorded in 1969, came at a particularly great era for the Stones; Mick Taylor had just replaced Brian Jones a few months before, tightening up the bandās live sound. This was also the last tour before they started adding extra musicians: youāre just hearing Taylor, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts and longtime touring pianist Ian Stewart. The classic version of āMidnight Ramblerā comes from this album.
26. Otis Redding – āLive In Europeā (1967)
ShareRedding was one of the greatest singers in the world in the late ā60s, and on this album, he was backed by one of the greatest bands: Booker T & The MGs. Together, they were a force of nature. Highlights included āRespectā (Otis sang it before Aretha), his cover of the Rolling Stonesā ā(I Canāt Get No) Satisfactionā and the Beatlesā āDay Tripper.ā
25. The Yardbirds – āFive Live Yardbirdsā (1964)
ShareThis also happens to be the Yardbirdsā debut album; their lead guitarist at the time was a young Eric Clapton who quickly outgrew the band but his playing here holds up to nearly anything heās done since.
24. Pearl Jam – āOctober 31st, 2009 ā The Spectrum, Philadelphiaā (2009)
ShareThere are so many Pearl Jam performances to choose from, as theyāve released authorized bootlegs of all of their shows for more than ten years. But this show had a special energy to it: it was the last concert ever at Philadelphiaās Spectrum, it was on Halloween, it was across the highway from a New York Yankees/Philadelphia Phillies World Series game, and it was the longest show the band had ever played at that point. It featured, among other surprises, their first performance of āBugs,ā and the rarely performed āOut Of My Mindā and āSweet Lew.ā Not to mention a cover of āWhip Itā in full Devo costumes.
23. David Bowie – āLive Santa Monica ā72ā (2008)
ShareOriginally available as a bootleg, it was later legitimately released, and some may prefer āZiggy Stardust: The Motion Pictureā from this same tour. But the Santa Monica show was recorded months earlier, when Bowie was still all-in with the āZiggy Stardustā persona and has a bit more intensity and less weariness. The band, led by guitarist Mick Ronson, was in top form.
22. AC/DC – āIf You Want Blood, Youāve Got Itā (1978)
ShareOf course, AC/DCās biggest success came with singer Brian Johnson, but as a live band, they were at their best when the late Bon Scott gripped the mic. As the late Malcolm Young once said about the album, āWe were young, fresh, vital and kicking ass."
21. Nirvana – āLive At Readingā (2009)
ShareThis is the 1992 show where Kurt Cobain was rolled onto the stage in a wheelchair while wearing a hospital gown. He, and the band, were still having fun with their success, even as they questioned it. They were on top of the world thanks to the meteoric success of āNevermind,ā and they played most of that album. Cobain gave a shoutout to his 12-day old daughter and led the audience in chanting, āCourtney, we love you!ā The performances were furious and proved why Nirvana was the band that everyone was watching, and listening to, in ā92.
20. Talking Heads – āStop Making Senseā (1984)
ShareStop Making Senseā is generally regarded as one of the greatest concert films ever, but even divorced of the visuals, the live album is a classic. Talking Heads made great records, but these live versions of āGirlfriend Is Betterā and āLife During Wartimeā top the originals.
19. Johnny Cash – āAt Folsom Prisonā (1968)
ShareThe line, āI shot a man in Reno, just to watch him dieā might get a rise out of a lot of audiences. But when Johnny Cash sang it for an audience of inmates at Folsom Prison, it obviously took on a new meaning; some of the faces looking back at Cash may actually have done just that, and they were paying the price. Cash sings some of his heaviest numbers, including ā25 Minutes To Goā and āDark As A Dungeon,ā but maintained his sense of humor in his in-between song banter, and also on āBusted.ā
18. Elton John – ā11-17-70ā (1971)
ShareElton John himself has cited this as his best live recording. The album title commemorates the date that it was recorded, and on November 17, 1970, he wasnāt yet a star. Itās hard to imagine these days, but in 1970, Elton John was an up-and-coming artist with something to prove, and he played like his life depended on it. He hadnāt yet added guitarist Davey Johnstone to his band; back then, it was just the trio of him, bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson. Legend has it that Elton cut his hand during the show, and by the time it was over, the piano keys were covered with blood. And it sounds like it.
17. Bob Dylan – āThe Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Live 1966, āThe Royal Albert Hallā Concertā (1998)
ShareāThe Royal Albert Hallā is in quotes because (as most Dylan fans know) this concert t was actually recorded at the Manchester Free Trade Hall during Dylan's world tour in 1966, but the much-bootlegged show was often falsely attributed to the Royal Albert Hall on the illicit recordings. The show is legendary for its second set, which featured an electric rock band, much to the horror of Dylanās folkie fans. The acoustic songs are great -- Dylan was a master solo performer, even though he was losing interest -- but the electric set was Dylan as his most defiant; itās almost punk rock at points.
16. Cheap Trick – āAt Budokanā (1979)
ShareSure, Cheap Trickās first three albums were great, but when you want to hear āSurrenderā or āHello Thereā or āBig Eyesā or āI Want You To Want Me,ā youāre gonna reach for your āAt Budokanā LP. Like some of the other live albums on this list, it took the band from the trenches and made them stars.
15. Bruce Springsteen – āHammersmith Odeon, London ā75ā (2006)
ShareWhen Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band hit Europe on their āBorn To Runā tour, the hype was so overwhelming that there was a certain skepticism from the audience, and even Springsteen was annoyed with his record label. But this show, recorded on November 18, 1975 launched him as a major star in Europe; he remains incredibly popular there to this day.
14. Deep Purple – āMade In Japanā (1973)
ShareLike Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple took their muscular blues-based compositions to different places in concert via their improvisational jams. Singer Ian Gillan really shines here, particularly on āChild In Timeā (possibly his finest moment). This album is one of the blueprints for live heavy metal for decades to come.
13. U2 – āUnder A Blood Red Skyā (1983)
ShareOnce upon a time, U2 were a post-punk band who wore their hearts on their sleeves; they were trying to take over the world, they hadnāt yet discovered sarcasm, they still thought mullets were cool and they didnāt bother with stage production of any kind. āUnder A Blood Red Skyā caught them towards the end of the era before they were huge rock stars, but were intent on stepping into the shoes of the Who and the Clash.
12. Aretha Franklin – āLive At Fillmore Westā (1971)
ShareA great singer can sing anything; Franklin was one of the greatest (maybe *the* greatest) and so when she hit the storied rock venue the Fillmore West, she had some appropriate covers in her set: the Beatlesā āEleanor Rigby,ā Stephen Stillsā āLove The One Youāre Withā and Simon & Garfunkelās āBridge Over Troubled Water.ā Those interpretations held up to her own repertoire, which included āRespectā and āDr. Feelgood.ā Bonus: Ray Charles shows up for āSpirit In The Dark.ā
11. Motorhead – āNo Sleep āTil Hammersmithā (1981)
ShareReleased at the peak of Motorheadās career, it follows their āOverkill,ā āBomberā and āAce of Spadesā albums - records that had impossibly fast jams. And, crazily enough, they got even faster on āNo Sleep.ā Motorhead released a lot of live albums, but this is the best of them.
10. Bob Marley & The Wailers – āLive!ā (1975)
ShareThe studio version of āNo Woman No Cryā from 1974ās āNatty Dreadā was lovely, but the live version, taken from this album, is the definitive one. How did reggae cross over from Jamaica to huge audiences in America? āLive!ā had a lot to do with it.
9. Peter Frampton – āFrampton Comes Aliveā (1976)
ShareBy 1975 when this album was recorded, former Humble Pie singer/guitarist Peter Frampton had released four solo albums, none of which made much impact. But, true to the albumās title, some of the songs came alive in concert; āFrampton Comes Alive!ā topped the album charts and was the best selling album of 1976, making Frampton a huge star.
8. Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band – āLive Bulletā (1976)
ShareSeger tells the audience during the second concert taped for this album, āAs I told everybody last night, I was reading in Rolling Stone where they said, āDetroit audiences are the greatest rock & roll audiences in the world.ā I thought to myself, āS---! I've known that for ten years!āā That audience may well have inspired the performances here, which are now iconic. In 1975, when the album was recorded, Seger was huge in the Motor City, but soon after the release of this album, he became one of Americaās biggest rock stars.
7. KISS – āAliveā (1975)
ShareāYou wanted the best? You got the best! The hottest band in the world: KISS!ā That quote, which opens every KISS concert to this day, has become something of a cliche in recent decades. But in 1975, it was actually true. And even though a lot of post-production tightened up the live album, it captures the excitement of KISSās live shows back when KISS werenāt yet a merchandising machine and they still had something to prove.
6. Santana – āThe Woodstock Experienceā (2009)
ShareSantana hadnāt yet released their debut album, but after their performance at the 1969 Woodstock festival, they were stars. Listen to this album and youāll understand why. Even if their entire career ended here, theyād still be legendary. āSoul Sacrificeā is one of the greatest live performances ever.
5. The Allman Brothers Band – āAt Fillmore Eastā (1971)
ShareRecorded at the Fillmore East in New York In March of 1971 the album was released in July of that same year, just three months before leader and guitarist Duane Allmanās tragic death. āAt Fillmore Eastā truly marked the end of an era, and saw one of rockās greatest talents in peak form. The rest of the band were incredible as well -- particularly singer Gregg Allman. This is improvisational rock music at its finest.
4. James Brown – āLive At The Apollo, 1962ā (1963)
ShareWhile Brown wouldnāt have considered himself ārock and roll,ā he certainly made an impact on any rock and roll frontperson with his records and his live shows. Mick Jagger, Roger Daltrey, Steven Tyler and Bruce Springsteen all took note of Brownās power as a live performer (and Springsteen surely noted the tight ship that Brown ran when it came to leading his band).
3. Jimi Hendrix – āLive At Montereyā (1986)
ShareYes, this is the historic 1967 concert where he blew minds, torched his guitar and became a star in the U.S. (he was already popular in the U.K.). That context is useful, but even without it, this performance shows the Jimi Hendrix Experience at the top of their game. Hendrix made some iconic songs his own (āLike A Rolling Stone,ā āWild Thingā and of course, āHey Joeā) and showed that his own material could hold up to those classics.
2. Led Zeppelin – āHow The West Was Wonā (2003)
ShareBetter late than never: it took more than two decades after Led Zeppelinās dissolution for the band to put out the definitive live document of their live prowess. Compiled from two 1972 shows, it showcases the band at the peak of their powers. Their shorter songs pack a mighty punch, but they also flex their improvisational muscles on extended versions of āDazed And Confusedā and āWhole Lotta Love.ā And of course, their acoustic set (with āGoing To California,ā āThatās The Wayā and āBron-Y-Aur Stompā) was gorgeous.
1.The Who – āLive At Leedsā (1970)
ShareThe Whoās studio albums make up one of the greatest discographies in popular music, but none of them matched the raw power of āLive At Leeds.ā In recent years, the Whoās concerts have featured Pete Townshend and Roger Daltrey with five other musicians, and sometimes, a full orchestra. Back then, they made more noise with just John Entwistle and Keith Moon. These days, you can buy an extended version of āLive At Leedsā with 30+ songs. The original tracklist included just six: three covers (āYoung Man Blues,ā āSummertime Bluesā and āShakinā All Overā) and three originals (āSubstitute,ā āMagic Busā and a 14-minute long āMy Generationā). And while we should be grateful for every last second that was captured for the full length, it was the original six-song version that inspired most of the hard rock and heavy metal bands of the ā70s (and surely alienated some of the Whoās early-ā60s mod fans).