July 24, 1977
Love Gun Tour
Pacific Coliseum - Vancouver, British Columbia
According to the promoter:Ā āThe cops heard of KIĻĻā so-called reputation and they ordered four squads to the show. They played poker all night and billed us $8,000 for overtimeāĀ (Montreal Gazette, 8/2/77).
From a local review: āHype? Not really. KIĻĻ promise nothing less than the greatest spectacle in rock and nothing less is exactly what they provide. From that it is easy for the unaware parent or pundit to mistake KIĻĻ for a threat to our civilized way of life. But understand this, KIĻĻ are not self-pitying, humorless nihilists like the punk rockers. If anything, they are a fantasy for an age that has seen just about everything. Of course they appeal to the escapist stripe. It would be fun to stand seven feet tall, spit fire, deafen everyone within a 1,000 yard radius and make a million bucks doing itā (Vancouver Sun, 7/25/77).
From another local review: āThe KIĻĻ concert Sunday night was better than the fireworks display the Sea Festival holds annually. The Coliseum took on all the aspects of kidās day at the PNEās Playland with harried parents leading offspring by the hand up into the stands, plopping their plump selves down into the same seats they had at The Ice Capades or The Shriner Circus, and stopping up their ears with cotton⦠KIĻĻ was perfunctory as you please, well rehearsed, but musically deadening and the sound from the press box was, as usual, muddy except when Ace Frehley took off into one of his solos. Frehley appeared to be bored, or tired, or sick, or drunk, or all four, while batman, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley did their best to whip up a surprisingly complacent audience which eventually succumbed and went nuts when the hits and the gimmickry got into gearā (Georgia Straight, 7/28/77)














