As many well-versed metalheads know,
Bruce Kulick was
Kiss' guitarist during their wildly uneven "non-makeup era" of the mid-‘80s through mid-‘90s. After the original
Kiss lineup reunited in 1996,
Kulick was out on his own (although lending his songwriting talents to subsequent
Kiss-related studio efforts), and launched a sporadic solo career. His third solo effort overall, the appropriately titled
BK3, was released in 2010. Borrowing a page out of
Santana's rule book,
Kulick enlists quite a few special guests to drop by and lend a hand throughout, including a few surprise ones (
the Knack's
Doug Fieger,
Toto's
Steve Lukather) and a few not too surprising ones (
Kiss'
Gene Simmons and
Eric Singer,
Kulick's
Union bandmate
John Corabi). As a result, the majority of
BK3 is hard rock-based, but with others dropping in and out of the tracks, there are a few stylistic detours to boot. Interestingly,
Gene Simmons' track, "Ain't Gonna Die," catches everyone's favorite fire-breathing demon in a melodic mood, while his son,
Nick Simmons, tackles a track that would have been expected from his papa, the heavier "Hand of the King." Elsewhere, dig the tough power pop of "Dirty Girl" (featuring
Fieger) and the instrumental guitar shredfest "Between the Lines" (which sees
Lukather and
Kulick slugging it out on their six-strings), as well as quite a few songs on which
Kulick handles the vocals himself. In the wake of recent inspired
Kiss-related releases (
Ace Frehley's
Anomaly and
Kiss' own
Sonic Boom),
Bruce Kulick keeps the winning streak intact with
BK3.
–
Greg Prato, Rovi