Kiss
Home Picture Gallery Biography Vital Fact Interview Multimedia Lyric Wallpaper Yahoo! Club FAQ Contact
Write to Celeb
|
 |
|
Eric
Carr - The Fox |
| Although
he was not an original member of Kiss, drummer Eric Carr was
automatically accepted and held in high regard by their legions
of fans. Born Paul Caravello in Brooklyn, New York on
July 15, 1950, the youngster discovered rock n' roll the way
many others did in the early '60s, via the Beatles.
Automatically taken by the Fab Four, Caravello began
drumming on magazines until his parents bought him his first
proper drum set shortly thereafter. His first real band, the
Cellarmen, played the latest Top 40 hits at Bar Mitzvahs and
weddings |
| throughout the
NYC-area. Come the '70s however, Caravello had become a
great admirer of such hard rock acts as Led Zeppelin and the
New York Dolls, although his bands throughout the decade,
Creation and Mother Nature/Father Time, were disco-based.
At the dawn of the '80s, the drummer had become |
 |
frustrated
that his previous bands had failed to break through to the big
time. Then, one fateful day in June of 1980, a friend from a
former band happened to bump into Caravello, and told him
that Kiss were holding auditions to replace the just-departed
Peter Criss. He managed to get a try-out through Kiss'
management, and jammed with the band on June 23rd. Barely over
one week later, on July 1st, Caravello was invited to
join the band. While the band' s popularity stateside wasn't
what it used to be, they were still one of the top rock groups
in just every other area of the world. With a massive tour of
Europe and Australia already booked and fast approaching, Caravello
and the rest of Kiss crammed to come up with a stagename for the
new member, and a persona that tied in with the band's make-up
and costumes.
Caravello was re-christened Eric Carr, and after a failed
attempt at being a hawk, Carr assumed the identity of a
fox. Carr's drumming fit |
|
 |
in perfectly with
the band -- he was more of a heavy metal drummer than his
predecessor was, but strangely, Kiss did not get around to fully
using all of Carr's talents until their monumental 1982
release, Creatures of the Night. The drums were recorded
to sound like mini-cannons, on par with such heavy hitters as
Led Zeppelin's John Bonham and Deep Purple's Ian Paice,
while the band rediscovered their heavy metal roots.
Carr remained a member of Kiss for the remainder of the
'80s, playing on such hit albums as Lick It Up (Kiss'
first sans-make-up) and Animalize, amongst others, and
touring arenas the world over. Although original Kiss members
Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley wrote |
| the
majority of the band's songs during Carr's tenure, he was
responsible for co-penning such fan favs as "All Hell's
Breaking Loose," "Under the Gun," and "Little
Caesar," the latter featuring his lead vocal talents.
Shortly after Kiss wrapped up their tour in support of their Hot
in the Shade album, Carr was diagnosed with cancer.
Despite what was believed to be a successful operation
initially, Carr eventually died on November 21, 1991, at
the age of 41. As a tribute to Eric, Kiss included an
unreleased drum-driven track from 1981 on their 1992 comeback
album, Revenge, entitled "Carr Jam 1981."
Carr remains close to Kiss fan's hearts worldwide, as the
success of two releases in 1999 proved -- the biographical
homevideo Tale of the Fox and an EP entitled Rockheads,
which included original music from a children's cartoon he was
creating towards the end of his life. Rockology followed
in 2000. |
|
Read about other Kiss
members:
Ace | Paul | Gene |
|
|
|
|
|