Lick It Up (song)

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"Lick It Up"
Single by Kiss
from the album Lick It Up
ReleasedSeptember 18, 1983 (US)
RecordedRight Track Studios,
New York City: 1983
Genre
Length3:56
LabelMercury 814 671-7 (US)
Songwriter(s)Paul Stanley, Vinnie Vincent
Producer(s)Michael James Jackson, Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons
Kiss singles chronology
"I Love It Loud" / "Danger"
(1982)
"Lick It Up" / "Dance All Over Your Face"
(1983)
"All Hell's Breakin' Loose" / "Young and Wasted"
(1984)
Audio sample
"Lick It Up"
  • file
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Music video
"Lick It Up" on YouTube

"Lick It Up" is a song by American rock band Kiss. It is the title track to the group's 1983 album of the same name. The song was released as the album's first single, and was a Top 40 hit in the UK, Switzerland, and Canada, although it failed to chart as highly in the U.S.

"Lick It Up" is a staple of the band's live performances; due to its popularity among fans, Kiss has performed the song over 1,300 times as of August 2015.[4]

Song information[]

A video was made to promote the single. It was the first music clip to feature the band without its makeup. The video premiered on MTV on September 18, 1983 in a half-hour special hosted by J.J. Jackson. Despite the hype and promotion for the single, it stalled at #66 on the American Billboard Hot 100.[5] However, the song broke into the Top 40 in several other countries.[6]

Kiss has performed "Lick It Up" on most of its tours since the single's release. The track was featured on the group's live albums Alive III and Kiss Symphony: Alive IV. It also appears on 2001's The Box Set. While a few others have been played in limited to rare occasions over the years, it is the only song from the band's unmasked era that has been regularly played live as a setlist staple since they returned to wearing their trademark makeup in 1996.

The song is featured in the TV series The Sopranos and in the video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, on the V-Rock radio station. The Kiss Symphony version appears in the video game Tony Hawk's Underground. The studio version of the song appears in the TV series "Family Guy" during the episode "Girl, Internetted."

Personnel[]

Kiss

References[]

  1. ^ August 15, Carlos RamirezPublished; 2011. "10 Unintentionally Funny Heavy Metal Videos". Noisecreep. Retrieved 2021-06-11.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ "The Ultimate Hair Metal Party Playlist". Kerrang!. Retrieved 2021-03-04.
  3. ^ KISSology - Kiss | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic, retrieved 2021-03-24
  4. ^ "KISS Tour statistics - songs played total". setlist.fm. Retrieved August 29, 2015. External link in |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ "Billboard singles chart history-Kiss". Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  6. ^ International Chart History
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