Current:Home > NewsIndexbit Exchange:Kiss say farewell to live touring, become first US band to go virtual and become digital avatars -AssetLink
Indexbit Exchange:Kiss say farewell to live touring, become first US band to go virtual and become digital avatars
PredictIQ View
Date:2025-04-11 02:19:35
On Saturday night,Indexbit Exchange Kiss closed out the final performance of their “The End of the Road” farewell tour at New York City’s famed Madison Square Garden.
But as dedicated fans surely know — they were never going to call it quits. Not really.
During their encore, the band’s current lineup — founders Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons as well as guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer — left the stage to reveal digital avatars of themselves. After the transformation, the virtual Kiss launched into a performance of “God Gave Rock and Roll to You.”
The cutting-edge technology was used to tease a new chapter of the rock band: after 50 years of Kiss, the band is now interested in a kind of digital immortality.
The avatars were created by George Lucas’ special-effects company, Industrial Light & Magic, in partnership with Pophouse Entertainment Group, the latter of which was co-founded by ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus. The two companies recently teamed up for the “ABBA Voyage” show in London, in which fans could attend a full concert by the Swedish band — as performed by their digital avatars.
Per Sundin, CEO of Pophouse Entertainment, says this new technology allows Kiss to continue their legacy for “eternity.” He says the band wasn’t on stage during virtual performance because “that’s the key thing,” of the future-seeking technology. “Kiss could have a concert in three cities in the same night across three different continents. That’s what you could do with this.”
In order to create their digital avatars, who are depicted as a kind of superhero version of the band, Kiss performed in motion capture suits.
Experimentation with this kind of technology has become increasingly common in certain sections of the music industry. In October K-pop star Mark Tuan partnered with Soul Machines to create an autonomously automated “digital twin” called “Digital Mark.” In doing so, Tuan became the first celebrity to attach their likeness to OpenAI’s GPT integration, artificial intelligence technology that allows fans to engage in one-on-one conversations with Tuan’s avatar.
Aespa, the K-pop girl group, frequently perform alongside their digital avatars — the quartet is meant to be viewed as an octet with digital twins. Another girl group, Eternity, is made up entirely of virtual characters — no humans necessary.
“What we’ve accomplished has been amazing, but it’s not enough. The band deserves to live on because the band is bigger than we are,” Kiss frontman Paul Stanley said in a roundtable interview. “It’s exciting for us to go the next step and see Kiss immortalized.”
“We can be forever young and forever iconic by taking us to places we’ve never dreamed of before,” Kiss bassist Gene Simmons added. “The technology is going to make Paul jump higher than he’s ever done before.”
And for those who couldn’t make the Madison Square Garden show — stay tuned, because a Kiss avatar concert may very well be on the way.
veryGood! (1751)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Weeks after a school shooting, students return for classes at Apalachee High School
- Gun violence leaves 3 towns in the South reeling
- A man who killed 2 Dartmouth professors as a teen is challenging his sentence
- Charges: D'Vontaye Mitchell died after being held down for about 9 minutes
- Brent Venables says Oklahoma didn't run off QB Dillon Gabriel: 'You can't make a guy stay'
- Hawaii has gone down under for invasive species advice – again
- NBA preseason schedule: Key dates as 2024-25 regular season rapidly approaches
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- Derek Hough Shares His Honest Reaction to Anna Delvey’s Controversial DWTS Casting
Ranking
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- LaBrant Family Faces Backlash for Having Daughter Everleigh Dance to Diddy Song
- Michael Strahan reveals he's a grandfather after the birth of his first grandchild
- A bitter fight between two tribes over sacred land where one built a casino
- Small twin
- Tom Watson, longtime Associated Press broadcast editor in Kentucky, has died at age 85
- Maryland sues the owner and manager of the ship that caused the Key Bridge collapse
- In effort to refute porn-site message report, Mark Robinson campaign hires a law firm
Recommendation
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Key takeaways from AP’s interview with Francis Ford Coppola about ‘Megalopolis’
Why could Helene trigger massive rainfall inland? Blame the Fujiwhara effect
American consumers are feeling less confident as concerns about jobs take center stage
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
The Daily Money: The high cost of campus housing
Video game actors’ union calls for strike against ‘League of Legends’
US appeals court says man can sue Pennsylvania over 26 years of solitary confinement