The
members of Aerosmith began mending their fences when Perry and Whitford showed
up backstage after a February 1984 Aerosmith concert in Boston. They put the
band back together, embarked on the lengthy ?Back in the Saddle? tour, and signed
with Geffen Records. Most important of all, exhibiting the dogged tenacity that's
typified their approach to music, the group members got clean and sober in 1987
and thereafter reclaimed their rock and roll throne with some of the most passionate
and hard-hitting music of their career.
No group in rock history has ever engineered a Phoenix-like resurrection to
rival Aerosmith?s remarkable recovery and rebound. Remarkably, their chart success
from 1987 onward eclipsed their first rise to the top in the 1970s. Turning
more towards power ballads without abandoning their hard-rocking base, Aerosmith
conquered the music and video charts with such songs as ?Angel,? ?Love On an
Elevator,? ?Janie?s Got a Gun,? ?Cryin?? and ?Crazy? (which was voted the #1
All-Time Favorite Video by MTV viewers in 1994). In the early 1990s, they signed
a contract worth $30 million that brought Aerosmith back home to Columbia Records.
In 1998, they scaled another career milestone when ?I Don?t Want to Miss a Thing?
became their first #1 single.
At
this point in their career, Aerosmith made good on every boast implied by their
music and image. Then things began unraveling for them. After being on top for
much of the Seventies, Aerosmith nearly lost it all to substance abuse. ?Our
story was basically that we had it all and we pissed it all away,? says Joe
Perry. Sessions for 1977?s Draw the Line were slowed due to the excesses of
Tyler and Perry. Though that album had its share of strong tracks, including
the title track, Aerosmith was beginning to sag under the weight of their collective
addictions. Their contribution to the 1978 film Sgt. Pepper?s Lonely Heart?s
Club Band, a sassy remake of the Beatles? ?Come Together,? proved to be the
last time Aerosmith graced the Top Forty for nearly a decade. Tyler and Perry
became known as ?the Toxic Twins.?Aerosmith?s downward spiral accelerated with
the hostile 1979 departure of Perry (replaced by Jimmy Crespo), a horrific 1980
motorcycle accident that sidelined Tyler for a year, and the 1981 exodus of
Brad Whitford (replaced by Rick Dufay). Perry embarked upon a solo career, while
Aerosmith moved from arenas to clubs.
Aerosmith
were America's feisty retort to hard-rocking British groups like the Rolling
Stones, the Yardbirds, the Who, Cream, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin. Almost
alone among American bands, Aerosmith matched those British legends in power,
intensity, and notoriety. Moreover, they've long since surpassed many of their
influences in terms of longevity and popularity. In the words of vocalist Steven
Tyler, "We weren't too ambitious when we started out. We just wanted to
be the biggest thing that ever walked the planet, the greatest rock band that
ever was."
Joe Perry proclaimed with no false modesty. ?We were the garage band that made
it really big - the ultimate party band.? No less an authority than Jimmy Page
has called them "the ideal rock and roll band." Thirty years after
forming, the "bad boys from Boston" remain a vital, ongoing force
whose unshakable spirit and boundless energy virtually define rock and roll.
Surviving shifting tastes and trends in popular music, Aerosmith has solidly
epitomized the bedrock virtues and raucous magic that comes from a simple yet
combustible recipe of guitars, bass, drums, vocals and attitude
Appropriately, for a band that would dominate the Seventies rock scene, the
Aerosmith saga began at the dawn of that decade in Sunapee, New Hampshire, asummer
resort town. Steve Tyler (born Steven Tallarico), late of the bands Chain Reaction
and William Proud, hooked up with guitarist Joe Perry and bassist Tom Hamilton,
formerly of the Jam Band. Drummer Joey Kramer and guitarist Brad Whitford rounded
out the lineup. They called themselves Aerosmith, an ?imaginary band name? dreamed
up and doodled on notebooks by Kramer in high school.
Aerosmith drew upon rock and roll tradition, evincing blues-based British Invasion
influences. Yet they were flashier and more hard-hitting than their precursors,
helping to draft a new blueprint for rock music in the brave new world of the
Seventies. The liner notes to their self-titled debut album, released in 1973,
describe them as ?third-generation rockers with a desire to create something
new.? Aerosmith contained unpolished hard-rock nuggets like ?Make It? and ?Mama
Kin,? along with might well be rock?s first power ballad, ?Dream On,? which
found them sounding wise beyond their years. They followed with three strong
albums of genre-defining rock music - Get Your Wings, Toys in the Attic and
Rocks - that established them as America?s band in the Seventies. Toys in the
Attic, their most solid effort of the decade, included the riff-driven classics
?Walk This Way,? ?Sweet Emotion? (Aerosmith?s first Top 40 hit), and the driving
title track.
Aerosmith
released its 13th studio album, Just Push Play, in the spring of 2001. It came
on the heels of a halftime Superbowl performance that found them joined by -
and yielding no quarter to - youthful upstarts Britney Spears, N?Sync, Mary
J. Blige and Nelly. It was another shot of career momentum for a band that refuses
to roll over. Meanwhile, their canon of great music and reputation as an unbeatable
live act continues to grow. Perhaps most notably, the same five musicians who
came together as Aerosmith in 1970 are still together more than 30 years later,
as their train keeps a-rolling with no end in sight.