Aerosmith 620
N. Route 31, Suite C Crystal Lake, Illinois 60012
| One
of the USA's most popular of all hard-rock acts, Aerosmith was formed in 1970
when vocalist Steven Tyler met Joe Perry while the latter was working in a Sunapee,
New Hampshire ice cream parlour, the Anchorage. Tyler was in the area visiting
the family-owned holiday resort, Trow-Rico. Perry, then playing in the Jam Band,
invited Tyler to join him in a Cream-styled rock combo. Together with fellow Jam
Band member Tom Hamilton and new recruits Joey Kramer and Ray Tabano, the band's
founding line-up was complete. However, Tabano was quickly replaced by the former
member of Justin Tyme, Earth Inc., Teapot Dome and Cymbals Of Resistance, Brad
Whitford.
After playing their first gig at the Nipmuc Regional High School,
the band took the name Aerosmith. Their popularity throughout the Boston area
grew rapidly, and a triumphant gig at Max's Kansas City, witnessed by Clive Davis,
led to a recording contract with Columbia Records. In 1973, Aerosmith secured
a minor chart placing with their self-titled debut album. Although its attendant
single, "Dream On", initially peaked at number 59, it became a Top 10
hit in April 1976. Get Your Wings inaugurated a fruitful working relationship
with producer Jack Douglas. Nationwide tours established the quintet as a major
attraction, a position consolidated by the highly successful Toys In The Attic,
which has now sold in excess of six million copies worldwide. A fourth album,
Rocks, achieved platinum status within months of its release. Aerosmith maintained
their pre-eminent position with Draw The Line and the powerful Live! Bootleg,
but despite popular acclaim, they failed to gain the approbation of many critics
who dubbed the band "derivative", particularly of Led Zeppelin. Tyler's
physical resemblance to Mick Jagger, and his foil-like relationship with guitarist
Perry, also inspired comparisons with the Rolling Stones, with whom they shared
several musical reference points. In
1978, the band undertook a US tour of smaller, more intimate venues in an attempt
to decelerate their rigorous schedule. They appeared in the ill-fated Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band movie (as the Future Villain band), and although their
rousing version of "Come Together" reached the US Top 30, tension between
Tyler and Perry proved irreconcilable. The guitarist left the band following the
release of the disappointing Night In The Ruts and subsequently founded the Joe
Perry Project. Jimmy Crespo joined Aerosmith in 1980, but the following year Brad
Whitford left to pursue a new career with former Ted Nugent band member, guitarist
Derek St. Holmes. Newcomer Rick Dufay debuted on Rock In A Hard Place, but this
lacklustre set failed to capture the fire of the band's classic recordings. Contact
between the band and Perry and Whitford was re-established during a 1984 tour.
Antagonisms were set aside, and the following year, the quintet's most enduring
line-up was performing together again. The first fruits of a lucrative new contract
with Geffen Records, the Ted Templeman-produced Done With Mirrors was a tentative
first step, after which Tyler and Perry underwent a successful rehabilitation
programme to rid themselves of drug and alcohol dependency, synonymous with the
band's hedonistic lifestyle. In 1986, they accompanied rappers Run-DMC on "Walk
This Way", an Aerosmith song from Toys In The Attic and a former US Top 10
entry in its own right. The collaboration was an international hit, rekindling
interest in Aerosmith's career, with the following year's "Dude (Looks Like
A Lady)" reaching number 14 in the US charts. Recorded with producer Bruce
Fairbairn, Permanent Vacation became one of their bestselling albums, and the
first to make an impression in the UK, while the highly acclaimed Pump and Get
A Grip (also produced by Fairbairn) emphasized their revitalization. Fêted
by a new generation of acts, the quintet are now seen as elder statesmen, but
recent recordings show them leading by example. Big Ones was a well-chosen compilation,
satisfying long-term fans, but more importantly, it introduced a younger audience
to a dinosaur band who still sound fresh and exciting, refuse to compromise and
certainly have not "gone soft". Those wishing to immerse themselves
should invest in the impressive 13-CD box set Box Of Fire, which comes complete
with rare bonus tracks and a free, ready-to-strike match! The
band returned to Columbia Records in the mid-90s and spent an age recording Nine
Lives. In Tyler's words, "this album has taken me as far as I've ever wanted
to go and gotten me back again". It was worth the wait, bearing all the usual
trademarks, and yet sounding strangely fresh. The hit single "Falling In
Love (Is Hard On The Knees)" preceded its release in February 1997. Although
Tyler has reached his half-century, he still seems ageless on stage - even Jagger
and Bruce Springsteen seem jaded compared to this rock 'n' roll ballet-dancer,
apparently still in his prime. In September 1998, the band achieved their first
ever US number 1 with the Diane Warren-penned ballad "I Don't Want To Miss
A Thing", taken from the soundtrack of the movie Armageddon. The song stayed
at the top for four weeks, and provided the band with their first UK Top 10 single,
eventually climbing to number 4 in October. The new century saw the band as sharp
as ever, with Just Push Play proving to be another strong album in a career that
now spans four decades. Need tickets to see Aerosmith?
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