The song was also featured in a What's New, Scooby-Doo? episode "A Scooby-Doo Halloween". The male part of the group (excluding Kurt Hummel) were also dressed as Kiss members. The cast of Glee covered the song in the episode " Theatricality".
The song is featured in the movie Detroit Rock City and appears on the soundtrack for the movie. Ī 2007 re-recording of the song by the band is featured on the music/rhythm video game Guitar Hero 5. It was listed as the 27th single of '76 in Canada. The song was performed on almost every tour since its release, being dropped for Lick It Up Tour, Animalize Tour and Asylum Tour. A music video was made for the live version of the song from the 1996 concert in Tiger Stadium, from the Alive/Worldwide Tour. The song is also one of few to be sung by both Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. In Canada, the single was far more successful, reaching #1 on the RPM national singles chart on May 22, 1976. While the song would break into the American Billboard Top 40, peaking at #31, it would prove to not be as successful as its predecessor was but would remain in the band's concert set lists for almost every tour from that point on. Released as a single in 1976, the band and their record company, Casablanca Records, were trying to cash in on the success of their previous single, the live version of "Rock and Roll All Nite", by releasing another anthem. The version found on Smashes, Thrashes & Hits is 16 seconds longer, as the chorus repeats and the song ends with "Shout it!". The Killers version is the shortest with the duration of 2:35 as a result of the fade-out of the song starting during the first repetition of the "Shout it, shout it, shout it out loud" lyric following Gene Simmons' "Oh yeah". The Alive II single, which was described by Billboard magazine as a "raucous rocker" that "catches the excitement and energy of the live show," is 23 seconds shorter than the album song due to the removal of audience chant "We want Kiss". The single version of the song is 12 seconds shorter than the studio due to the last "Shout it, shout it, shout it out loud" line being excluded. The song was edited several times for singles and compilation albums. The title of the song was taken from British beat group The Hollies' song "We Want to Shout It Out Loud", which Wicked Lester (pre-Kiss) recorded for their only unreleased album.
The song was performed on almost every tour for many years, and is one of the most played songs in the Kiss catalog, having been played over one thousand and four hundred times as of June 2014.
It was also the band's first single to top the charts, as it reached number 1 hit in Canada on May 22, 1976. It was released as the lead single off the album, and it proved to be successful, becoming the band's second single to break the Top 40, after " Rock and Roll All Nite". " Shout It Out Loud" is a song by the American hard rock group Kiss, originally released on their 1976 album, Destroyer. " Rocket Ride (Edit)" / "Tomorrow and Tonight (live)" In 2020 the programme includes a number of initiatives to connect young people with poetry, the stories connected to Windrush heritages as well as our England’s New Lenses Photography project."Shout It Out Loud (Live)" / " Nothin' to Lose (Live)" It has recently been accepted for presentation as part of an international conference on digital heritage and the environment in Lofoten, Norway entitled, ‘See the Past, Imagine the Future’. Stonehenge 3019: a film that shows an otherworldly future for our World Heritage Site was produced by a group of local young people. ‘Our House’ has been shortlisted for a UK Heritage Award 2020 for Best Event, Festival or Exhibition. It explores the history of Eltham Palace and LGBTQ+ heritage. ‘Our House’: a new theatre piece devised entirely by young people under 25 from LGBTQ+ Charity METRO and the National Youth Theatre. Shout Out Loud is transforming how we tell England’s stories, with young people at the forefront. From The Cenotaph in London to Berwick Barracks in Northumberland, young people are making art, developing new plays, films, soundscapes, and exhibitions all inspired by England’s rich heritage. Shout Out Loud projects create new ways for people of all ages to learn more about some of the most important heritage sites in England.