Everything Music. Everything News. Everything live.

KISS Kruise Drops Anchor in Vegas for Round Two

V-spectrum, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
V-spectrum, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

There's a certain irony in calling something a “kruise” when the closest body of water is a hotel swimming pool, but KISS have never been a band overly concerned with semantics. Paul Stanley confirmed during an April 11 Q&A session at the Indy KISS Fan Expo that the 2026 edition of KISS Kruise: Landlocked In Vegas will return to Virgin Hotels Las Vegas this November, marking the second consecutive year the legendary band has swapped open seas for the Strip.

The pivot from ocean liner to desert oasis wasn't exactly a creative choice. After hosting 11 branded cruises departing from ports in Los Angeles, Miami, and New Orleans over the years, KISS found themselves squeezed out of the maritime market as more and more acts crowded into the rock cruise space. Rather than fight for deck space, the band made the pragmatic call to plant their flag on dry land, rebranding the originally planned “KISS Army Storms Vegas” concept into the inaugural Landlocked In Vegas event last November.

That 2025 debut carried enormous emotional weight. The weekend served as a dual celebration of five decades of KISS and the 50th anniversary of the KISS Army fan club, and it arrived just weeks after the death of founding guitarist Ace Frehley, who passed away on October 16, 2025, at age 74 following complications from a fall at his home studio. The band opened their unplugged set at Virgin Hotels by asking fans to raise electric candles that had been distributed before the show in tribute to the Spaceman. In one of his final interviews before his death, Frehley had revealed he'd turned down an invitation to participate in the event, characteristically blunt in his assessment of the venue choice.

The 2025 edition also marked the first time Stanley, Gene Simmons, and company had performed together since closing out the End of the Road tour at Madison Square Garden in December 2023, and they did it without the iconic greasepaint. It was their first unmasked performance in two years, a striking visual statement from a band that built an empire on face paint and pyrotechnics. The supporting lineup was a who's who of '80s hard rock royalty: Quiet Riot, Stephen Pearcy and Warren DeMartini performing the music of RATT, Sebastian Bach, Bruce Kulick, Black ‘N Blue, Kuarantine, and School of Rock all took the stage across the weekend. The event was co-produced by Pophouse, Topeka, and Vibee.

Stanley, speaking to the packed Expo crowd in Indianapolis, was characteristically bullish about the 2026 installment, promising that lessons learned from the inaugural run would translate into a significantly upgraded experience. He teased that the lineup of supporting acts would be worth the trip on its own and urged fans to start packing their bags. Full details on the 2026 edition are expected to be officially announced later this month.

For a band that supposedly retired from touring over two years ago, KISS continue to find creative ways to keep the machine running. The Landlocked format gives them something the cruise model never quite could: full control of the environment without the logistical headaches of chartering a ship. Whether this becomes an annual November tradition in Vegas or eventually evolves into something bigger remains to be seen, but one thing is clear. KISS may have hung up the makeup, but they haven't hung up the guitars.

Related Stories

U2’s Bono and The Edge Move Obama to Tears at Presidential Center Opening

Bono and The Edge performed ‘City of Blinding Lights’ at the Barack Obama Presidential Center dedication in Chicago on June 18, visibly moving the former

Syd Barrett’s 80th Birthday Marked With Cambridge Concert and Star-Studded Tribute Album

A tribute concert at Cambridge Corn Exchange and a new album featuring Pink Floyd, David Gilmour, and David Bowie mark what would have been Syd Barrett’s 80th

Aimee Mann Nearly Skipped Rush Reunion Tour After Geddy Lee’s Email

Aimee Mann reveals she nearly passed on performing ‘Time Stand Still’ with Rush on their Fifty Something reunion tour after receiving an email from Geddy Lee.

Kirk Hammett Releases Official Video From Frankfurt ‘The Collection: Live’ Event

Kirk Hammett has shared an official video of his May 23 ‘The Collection: Live’ book event at Zoom Saal in Frankfurt, featuring a surprise jam with Robert

Stewart Copeland Says He and Sting ‘Get Along Just Fine’ Despite Royalty Lawsuit

The Police drummer Stewart Copeland opens up about his friendship with Sting, the ongoing royalty lawsuit in U.K. High Court, and calling himself ‘fully

Jon Bon Jovi Declares Full Vocal Recovery, Announces Massive Tour Dates

Jon Bon Jovi says he’s ‘fully recovered’ from 2022 vocal cord surgery as Bon Jovi announce a nine-night MSG residency and UK/Ireland stadium shows for 2026.

Walter Parazaider, Founding Saxophonist of Chicago, Dead at 81

Walter Parazaider, the founding saxophonist and creative architect of Chicago, died June 17 at 81 after a six-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease.

Rush Thanks Fans After Inglewood Opener

Rush kicked off the Fifty Something Tour in Inglewood with Alex Lifeson, Geddy Lee, and Anika Nilles. The band thanked fans after four opening nights.

Steve Miller Books Two Fall 2026 Concerts at NYC’s Rose Theatre

Steve Miller confirms two concerts at Frederick P. Rose Hall in New York City on Oct. 9 and 10, 2026, honoring his blues and jazz heroes.