If rock’n’roll was born in the 1950s, then the 1970s were like its angsty teenage years. Disco, folk, and punk each resembled extremely different children, but the 1970s loved them all equally. Then funk, metal, and psychedelia emerged as major influencers of the music industry, and it was game on for music pandemonium. But what about the faces behind all those genres? Seeing musicians on stage is one thing, but it’s quite another when you see them sit back, have a drink, share a laugh, and even goof off like the rest of us. Here are a few backstage moments we wish we could have experienced first-hand.
The Father Of Funk At The Top Of His Game
By the 1970s, James Brown was already heralded as the father of funk, a relatively new music genre. The R&B musician married the style with African sounds to create hits like “Get Up….” He also wasn’t afraid to be a part of the social movements of the 60s. Songs like “Say It Loud– I’m Black And I’m Proud.”
Brown has been ranked #1 in the top R&B artists and has been inducted into the Rock and Roll and Songwriter Hall of Fame. This backstage photo would have been at the height of his career, in the mid-1970s, before his sales dropped in the 1980s.
ADVERTISEMENT
One Of The Original Performers On Saturday Night Live
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Swedish group Abba was one of the first groups from a non-English speaking country to achieve wild acclaim in English-speaking countries. Though they’d only formed in 1972, the group topped the charts from 1974 to 1982, right around the time they posed for this photograph.
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1974, the group won the Eurovision song contest with “Waterloo”, and a year later they were one of the first performers on Saturday Night Live. Backstage at SNL‘s fifth-ever episode, they posed for a group picture, seen above. They still had no idea what the next decade, and Mamma Mia, had in store for them.
ADVERTISEMENT
A Wonder He Is
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Stevie Wonder always looks like he’s playing music. While it appears at first glance that he’s playing piano for friends backstage, he actually is just fiddling with a cassette player. Nevertheless, he looks cool doing it.
ADVERTISEMENT
The musician went blind shortly after birth and was a child prodigy. He was signed by Motown at eleven years old, and by 13 he was the youngest to ever top the Billboards. His hits continued through the 1970s. After a car accident in 1973, he returned just as talented as ever, even after being in a coma for four days.
ADVERTISEMENT
Somewhere Over The Rainbow, This Conversation Happened
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Liza Minelli and Sammy Davis Jr. are photographed chatting, probably about being brought up by wildly famous entertainers. Liza Minelli is the daughter of Wizard Of Oz star Judy Garland– who couldn’t recognize that face?– and Sammy Davis Jr. joined his father and uncle to create the Will Mastin Trio as a child.
ADVERTISEMENT
Born in 1925, Sammy Davis Jr. faced racism not only as an artist but in the wars he fought in. Nevertheless, he rocked the industry as a triple threat. Sammy’s adversity must have been inspiring to the young Cabaret star, who was just 28 at the time.
ADVERTISEMENT
The British Stars Chat Backstage
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
British musicians Rod Stewart and David Bowie are photographed here chatting backstage at Madison Square Garden in 1975. By this time, Rod had established himself as a solo artist. His style combined folk, rock, and blues, and was popular enough to make his one of the best music-selling artists of all time.
ADVERTISEMENT
David Bowie had just wrapped up his tour as Ziggy Stardust, a character he performed as through the early 1970s. He was quoted discussing how Ziggy freed him from feeling like a robot. Though his commercial success would hit in the 1980s, Rod seems to be holding his bottle of wine to toast Bowie, who’s clearly not having it.
ADVERTISEMENT
The 1970s Just Wouldn’t Have Been The Same Without Him
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Ozzy Osbourne has always been hilarious. Just look at him, throwing his leg up in the air with pursed lips. Even the dude in the background is cracking up. At the time, he was the lead singer of Black Sabbath, who released their first album in 1970 and became pioneers of heavy metal.
ADVERTISEMENT
The album sold millions in the US, setting a fantastic foundation for the band to thrive through the mid-1970s. Unfortunately, Ozzy Osbourne would get booted out of the group in 1979 due to his drug and alcohol use. They’d be reunited again one day; Ozzy is just too irresistible.
ADVERTISEMENT
This Group Gained A New Stone
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Keith Richards being embraced by Ronnie Wood really conveys the sense of humor that a lot of rock bands seemed to possess in the 1970s. While rock and roll was the seed from which harsher genres like metal and punk grew, rock seemed to cling to a lightheartedness that made its deeper moments more viable.
ADVERTISEMENT
Ronnie Wood had just joined the Rolling Stones after musician Mick Taylor left the band. It’s clear that Ronnie Wood was already cozying up to the band members. The band would go on to reach their commercial peak in the late 1970s.
ADVERTISEMENT
They Ran Away From One Another
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Runaways are seen here messing around backstage at CBGB’s in 1976. The women had just been signed by Mercury Records and were on their way to stardom. However, their bright light burned out fast. In 1977, the group parted over disagreements about money and management. Fun as the picture seems, perhaps it was more symbolic of the ladies clashing.
ADVERTISEMENT
The females all went on their own ventures in the world of rock and roll, but arguably Joan Jett made the biggest impact. After being rejected by 23 labels, she became one of the first female artists to found her own label, named Blackheart Records.
ADVERTISEMENT
They Came, They Saw, They Conquered
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Aerosmith formed in 1970 and exploded over the course of the decade. After landing a dozen Billboard Top 100 singles, they were in high demand and toured extensively. Songs like “Dream On” and “Walk This Way” are hits that still rattle the streets today, all of which became smashes in the 1970s.
ADVERTISEMENT
The term “throw your hands in the air and wave them like you just don’t care” is more or less conveyed in this photo of the band, who probably know they’re rocking it.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Poet Of The Rock Scene
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Patti Smith is photographed being smothered by Iggy Pop and James Williamson at the Whisky A Go Go. These lads weren’t the only ones who couldn’t get enough of her. Patti was a poet who used her talent for storytelling to deepen the sincerity of the punk and rock scene.
ADVERTISEMENT
At the time this photo was taken, 1974, she would have just formed the Patti Smith Group, which recorded their first single, “Hey Joe/ Piss Factory” the same year. Smith’s music impacted many artists from the 1990s to today, who would likely love to kiss her on the cheek for it.
ADVERTISEMENT
They Went Too Hard
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
For those who hated peppy disco and upbeat soul and funk, there was a harsher sound in the 1970s called punk. The Sex Pistols brought the punk movement of New York to the UK in the mid-1970s. London teens formed the band in 1972, and by 1978 they were as volatile as their music suggested.
ADVERTISEMENT
This photograph taken in San Francisco shows lead singer Johnny Rotten facing away from surrounding fans. This backstage shot was taken at the band’s last concert. After a year of destroying rooms, self-mutilation, fights and even gang violence, the punk rockers broke up, probably for everyone’s best interest.
ADVERTISEMENT
Queen Rocks The Stadiums
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Queen’s album A Night At The Opera in 1975 made the group internationally recognizable but the song on that album that really did it is “Bohemian Rhapsody,” which stayed at number one in the UK for over two months!
ADVERTISEMENT
By the time this picture was snapped in 1977, the group was pumping out sport athems “We Are The Champions” and “We Will Rock You.” In this moment they are receiving ice hockey shirts at Maple Leaf Gardens. Before the Freddie Mercury mustache of the 1980s, he was that barefaced boy in the front cheersing the camera, probably to his own success.
ADVERTISEMENT
They’re Number One!
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Fleetwood Mac might be giggly in this photograph, but three years prior, in 1974, they’d found themselves without a guitarist or a vocalist after years of musicians coming and going. Fortunately, the addition of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks managed to keep them afloat.
ADVERTISEMENT
Then in 1977 they hit number one on the Billboard chart and stayed there for a whopping 31 weeks! That’s almost an entire pregnancy! It’s no wonder they’re all smiles backstage at the Los Angeles Rock Awards. Oh yeah, and the same year they won a Grammy for Album of the Year.
ADVERTISEMENT
Underrated For Their Time
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Fun fact, all of the Ramones actually adapted pseudonyms; none of them are biologically related despite having chosen to go by the last name Ramone. The dark hair and similar style can be deceiving, though.
ADVERTISEMENT
Backstage at the Paradise Theater in 1978, the Ramones sit back and relax. You may have noticed that they look rather even-keeled and relaxed for rockstars. That may have something to do with the fact that their commercial success didn’t really hit in the 1970s, which is really unfortunate considering they are now ranked in the top 100 rock bands.
ADVERTISEMENT
Blondie Celebrated Success With A Snake
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Long before Britney Spears made it sensual to sing while wearing a snake, Debbie Harry of Blondie cautiously draped a snake over her shoulders while backstage at the Philadelphia Spectrum. The show marked a transition as the band went from being underground to mainstream.
ADVERTISEMENT
Blondie first caught the public eye in the UK and Australia, but by the late 1970s, the US was finally ready to embrace the punk group. Their third album Parallel Lines was an international hit in 1978 and put them on track for mainstream success. Fortunately, the snake never harmed Debbie, and she went on to have a long career with the band.
ADVERTISEMENT
Jim Morrison and The Doors Were Worn Down
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This photo of The Doors backstage was snapped in 1970. It would be the last year of young Jim Morrison’s life, as he would pass away the following year, on July 3, 1971. Looking through images of the band behind the scenes, they often appear exhausted.
ADVERTISEMENT
Whether it’s from a tiring tour schedule, too much partying, or both, Morrison’s alcoholism was wearing him down, and he couldn’t stay out of trouble with the law. On September 20, 1970, after a wild show in Miami, Morrison was sentenced to six months in prison for indecent exposure and profanity.
ADVERTISEMENT
Freddie Mercury and Girlfriend Mary Austin
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This backstage photo was snapped in September 1977, picturing Freddie Mercury with his then-girlfriend Mary Austin. The couple met when he was 24-years-old and she was 19, dating from 1970-1976. The couple remained life-long friends, as they shared deep love and admiration for each other.
ADVERTISEMENT
Mercury said, “All my lovers asked me why they couldn’t replace Mary, but it’s simply impossible. The only friend I’ve got is Mary, and I don’t want anybody else. To me, she was my common-law wife. To me, it was a marriage.”
ADVERTISEMENT
A Room Full Of Greatness
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This epic gathering of greats was taken backstage at the Roxy. From left to right, this is folk singer David Blue, singer and actress Lainie Kazan, the legendary Bob Dylan, actor Robert De Niro, actress Sally Kirkland, singer-
ADVERTISEMENT
They were all in attendance for Ronee Blakley’s concert on August 18, 1976 in Los Angeles, California. Looks like a good time was had by all.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Supremes Weren’t Always Dancing
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Here is an image of the Motown group, The Supremes, with the lineup consisting of Jean Terrell, Cindy Birdsong, and Mary Wilson. They are sitting backstage as Wilson tempts a small dog with a bite of food in the early 1970s.
ADVERTISEMENT
Starting out as The Primettes in 1959, the vocal group grew to become one of Motown’s most successful acts and are to this day the most successful vocal group of all time. After some more lineup changes in the 1970s, the group disbanded in 1977.
ADVERTISEMENT
Behind The Scenes Of The Million Dollar Babies Tour
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This image was taken during a press conference with Mark Volamn from the group Flo & Eddie opening a joke container of canned snakes. Volman and his bandmate Howard Kaylan opened up for Alice Cooper during his Million Dollar Babies Tour.
ADVERTISEMENT
Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan were original founders of the rock and roll group The Turtles but joined the Mothers of Invention after the Turtles had broken up and were known as Phlorescent Leech & Eddie. They would later befriend Alice Cooper and join him on tour.
ADVERTISEMENT
Bo Diddley’s Gotta Eat!
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Here is an image captured of Bo Diddley frying chicken while giving an interview during the concert movie Let The Good Times Roll at Madison Square Garden in May 1972.
ADVERTISEMENT
Bo Diddley is recognized as being one of the first musicians to make the transition from the blues to rock and roll having been cited by the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, among others, as a great influence. During his career, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and received a Lifetime Achievement Award and a Grammy, among several other accolades.
ADVERTISEMENT
T. Rex Helping With Makeup
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Here, singer and guitarist Mark Bolan of T. Rex helps out his fellow bandmate Mickey Finn with his makeup backstage before a television performance in 1973. T. Rex was formed in England in 1967, releasing four psychedelic folk albums under the name Tyrannosaurus Rex.
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1969, the band began to shy away from their original electric sound and began shifting more toward acoustic music. Shortening their name to T. Rex in 1970, the band’s sound evolved once again as they became pioneers of the glam rock scene, experiencing equal popularity as the Beatles between 1970 and 1973.
ADVERTISEMENT
Warming Up With the Jackson 5
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Jackson 5 can be seen here warming up backstage at the Inglewood Forum on August 26, 1973. Composed of members of the Jackson family, the Jackson 5 was a pop group established in 1964, and were one of the first African American groups to achieve a crossover following alongside other Motown acts.
ADVERTISEMENT
Over the course of the group’s career, they managed to sell more than 100 million records worldwide, making them one of the best-selling bands of all time. They were also the first group to release four consecutive Hot 100 hits.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Kinks Enjoying A Cold One
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
At Newcastle City Hall in October 1973, Ray Davies and Mick Avory of the Kinks can be seen enjoying a beer backstage. Forming in 1964 by brothers Ray and Dave Davies, the Kinks grew to become one of the most popular and influential rock and roll group of the 1960s.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Kinks have had five Top 10 singles on the US Billboard chart with nine of their albums reaching the Top 40. In 1990, the group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005. In 2018, the Davies brothers announced they were working on reuniting the group.
ADVERTISEMENT
Long John Baldry Getting A Quick Trim
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Backstage at the Reading Festival on August 24, 1974, Long John Baldry is enjoying a quick beard trim before going on stage. Baldry came into popularity in the 1960s as one of the first British vocalists to perform the blues, eventually sharing the stage with the likes of the Rolling Stones and the Beatles.
ADVERTISEMENT
Even Rod Stewart and Elton John played in groups led by Baldry before they achieved their own fame. His career peaked in 1967 when his album Let The Heartaches Begin reached the No.1 spot in the UK and Australia.
ADVERTISEMENT
Thin Lizzy Rehearsing With Some Beers
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
At the dressing room at the Roadhouse in London, rock and roll group Thin Lizzy is enjoying some suds while preparing for their show on November 3, 1974. Founded in Dublin, Ireland in 1969, Thin Lizzy was led by vocalist Phil Lynott, who wrote most of the material and fronted the band for their twelve studio albums.
ADVERTISEMENT
Lynott is recognized as the first black Irishman to achieve commercial success in rock and roll music with the Rolling Stone noting that they were “far apart from the braying mid-70s metal pack.”
ADVERTISEMENT
Pink Floyd Were At Their Prime
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Pink Floyd formed their band in the mid-‘60s and after a few bandmate adjustments, they were solid as ever. The Lond crew became an international success with the album Dark Side Of The Moon.
ADVERTISEMENT
Pioneers of concept albums, the band produced songs throughout the 1970s that were meant to be listened to as pieces of one grand whole. In 1979 Pink Floyd transcended the music industry again with The Wall, an album that spawned a film.
ADVERTISEMENT
Nona Hendryx Prepping For A Performance
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Here, Nona Hendryx of Labelle is making sure her outfit is in order before taking the stage in Rotterdam, the Netherlands in 1975. Hendryx is known for her solo album as well as being a member of the trio Labelle, best known for their hit track “Lady Marmalade.”
ADVERTISEMENT
With many genres in her arsenal, she was able to play music ranging from soul to hard rock, and even new wave, making her extremely versatile. She’s also a distant cousin of guitarist Jimi Hendrix, with her last name originally containing an “i.”
ADVERTISEMENT
The Clash Broke Through With The Changing Decade
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Clash formed in London in 1976, and barely made it into the punk rock scene of the 1970s. Their third album, London Calling, debuted in the UK in December of 1979. It hit the United States at the very start of the 1980s and was declared the best album of the 1980s by Rolling Stone.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Clash’s punk attitude toward politics combined with their experimental sound made them a perfect fit for the late 1970s. CBS Records asked the band to tone down their raunchy sound and produce something cleaner, which merely forced the band to combine more genres that paved the way for their 1980s success.
ADVERTISEMENT
Lynyrd Skynyrd Faced A Lot Of Turbulence
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Lynyrd Skynyrd popularized Southern rock with beloved songs like “Sweet Home Alabama” that is still often played today. Though the band originally formed in 1964, their first album wasn’t released for another nine years, in 1973.
ADVERTISEMENT
The band steadily grew in popularity through the 1970s, but by 1975 tensions between bandmates were high. Drummer Burns had a mental breakdown while on tour, and bandmates Kooper and King left the band. Then, in October 1977, a plane crash took the lives of three band members while the remaining were seriously injured. A different lineup of the band is still rocking today.
ADVERTISEMENT
New York Dolls Built Quite The Following
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The New York Dolls were a hard rock band that formed in 1971. By the mid-’70s their cult records had developed a following. Their androgynous wardrobe– high heels, top hats, satin, scarfs, patterns, etc.– made them a standout amongst the rest of the decade’s rockers.
ADVERTISEMENT
After the fatal overdose of their drummer Billy Murcia in 1972, the band auditioned such drummers as Richard Hell of the Ramones and Peter Criss of Kiss. They went with their friend Jerry Nolan, but the band ultimately fizzled out through the latter half of the decade.
ADVERTISEMENT
King Crimson Progressed Through The ‘70s
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
King Crimson was a band that formed at the end of the 1960s and influenced the formation of progressive rock. The band formed out of the psychedelic pop trio Giles, Giles, and Fripp. In 1969 the band released the album that sent them soaring through the 1970s, which combined jazz, classical, and experimental music.
ADVERTISEMENT
Though the band doesn’t consider themselves progressive rock, they have nevertheless impacted various rock genre groups in arenas from psychedelic rock to alternative metal.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Allman Brothers Band Lost A Brother
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Allman Brothers Band was formed by brothers Duane and Gregg Allman. Contrary to the name, the rest of the five members were not related, but may as well have been for all they went through together in the band’s earliest years.
ADVERTISEMENT
In 1971, just two years after the band formed, Duane Allman died in a motorcycle accident at the young age of 24. The band pressed on for another five years, but ultimately parted ways in 1976. They’ve reformed and dissolved in the years since.
ADVERTISEMENT
Jackson Browne Brought Calm To The 1970s
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Jackson Browne was signed in 1971 and over the next several years his melodic, piano-driven songs would bring a cooling sensation to the otherwise upbeat, intense sounds of the 1970s. He had written songs for others throughout the 1960s and came into the spotlight as an individual artist through the 1970s.
ADVERTISEMENT
His first songs hit the US charts and his 1973 song “Take It Easy” still remains a top hit. The family man was accompanied by his wife and young son in his 1975 tour and began a life of activism in 1978.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Spinners Took Nearly Two Decades To Peak
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Spinners formed back in 1954 but didn’t reach commercial success until 1972. Fortunately, their R&B sound just doesn’t go out of style. After being signed to Atlantic Records the group landed two top ten singles and five top 100s.
ADVERTISEMENT
Fans couldn’t get enough of the band’s love-inspired songs such as “Could It Be I’m Falling In Love” and “Together We Make Such Sweet Music.” Their album Mighty Love featured three top twenty hits.
ADVERTISEMENT
Emerson, Lake & Palmer — Better Known As ELP
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Emerson, Lake & Palmer, also known as ELP, were one of the most successful progressive rock bands of the 1970s. They had nine RIAA-certified Gold record albums in the US and 48 million records sold. Their mix of rock, classical, and jazz created a sound that could appeal to various audiences.
ADVERTISEMENT
The band hit it big in 1970 and stayed prominent, putting out albums every year for the first half of the 1970s. After three final albums were released, two in 1977 and one in 1978, the band separated at the end of the decade.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Commodores Kept It Funky
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Commodores kept funk thriving through the end of the 1970s with songs like “Brick House” and “Nightshift.” Their debut album featured songs on the Billboard Hot 100 list in 1975. The six-man soul band appeared in the movie Thank God It’s Friday in 1978.
ADVERTISEMENT
Their hard funk sound in the mid-1970s gave way to softer songs moving towards the end of the decade. By the 1980s they were more focused on a commercial pop sound, and band members like Lionel Richie left to pursue individual success.
ADVERTISEMENT
Sammy Davis Jr. And The King
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Las Vegas has seen some amazing celebrity hangouts, and here’s one of them. It’s the legendary rock and roller Elvis Presley and singer/comedian/performer extraordinaire Sammy Davis, Jr. as they pal around backstage in Elvis’ dressing room.
ADVERTISEMENT
The photo was taken on opening night at the Showroom International Hotel on August 10, 1970, in Vegas. It’s not clear who’s telling the jokes here because everyone seems to be laughing at the same time.
ADVERTISEMENT
CBGB Was THE Place To Be
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This is singer-songwriter Elvis Costello and bass guitarist Richard Hell backstage at CBGB in 1978. Hell has played with the Neon Boys, Television, The Heartbreakers, and Richard Hell & the Voidoids.
ADVERTISEMENT
CBGB was one of the biggest dive bars/nightclubs in the world at the time, a favorite place for punk rock and new wave bands. The bar’s bathroom was so infamous that it was recreated for a Metropolitan Museum of Art show about the punk movement.
ADVERTISEMENT
KISS Reading Fan Magazines Backstage
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
This backstage photo of the rock band KISS was taken on May 31, 1974. In it, group members are pretending to read a magazine about rock stars, featuring David Bowie on the cover.
ADVERTISEMENT
With their signature makeup and over-the-top costumes and stage presence, KISS is one of the most iconic rock bands of the last forty years. As of 2021, they are scheduled to go on their final farewell tour, making vintage backstage images like this one priceless today.