Paul Stanley wrote “Detroit Rock City” as a thank-you to the city that loved Kiss first — Detroit gave them headlining gigs while they were still opening acts everywhere else.But producer Bob Ezrin heard the demo and told him to throw the whole lyric away.Because on a tour stop in Charlotte, North Carolina, something had happened that Stanley kept turning over in his mind. A fan was killed in a car accident right outside the arena — someone on their way to a Kiss show, a night that was supposed to be about being alive, who never made it through the doors.Ezrin pushed Stanley to rebuild the entire song around that moment. He reshaped the sound too — the bassline came from Curtis Mayfield’s “Freddie’s Dead,” and the Spanish-flavored twin guitar solo was entirely his idea.The single never charted in America. But “Detroit Rock City” became the one song Kiss never took off their setlist — and 50 years later, it still opens with a fake radio report about a fan who didn’t make it.
How Paul Stanley Turned “Detroit Rock City” Into One of Kiss’s Most Enduring Songs Some songs begin as a simple…