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R
Well, Tyler came off as a right bastard on 60 Minutes. I'm glad to see some things never change.
Their first five albums belong in any discerning rock'n'roller's collection. The rest? Not so much..
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stones78
For me they were never really good, in the 70's and 80's all they did was sleazy unsubtle rock, and the 90's discography is an embarrasment. Tyler's a caricature of himself now, to a much greater degree than Keith.
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keefriffhard4life
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stones78
For me they were never really good, in the 70's and 80's all they did was sleazy unsubtle rock, and the 90's discography is an embarrasment. Tyler's a caricature of himself now, to a much greater degree than Keith.
pretty sure there is nothing subtle about the songs "star @#$%&", little t&a", "coming down again", "brown sugar", etc.
stones fans always try to bash aerosmith and use some of the oddest arguments
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keefriffhard4life
i think every aerosmith album in the original columbia records run was great and then PUMP. after that its hit and miss
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mickschix
I've always loved Aerosmith, and " Seasons of Wither" remains one of my all-time favorite songs, very moody and just great how it builds. I do agree that Tyler seemed bitchy and on edge for that 60 Minutes interview and I think it has a lot to do with the hurt he still feels when after his fall off stage, no one from the band came around for 6 months. He has his reasons for being angry but I do see the bands' side of things! He hurt them in their pocket books, the tour crashed and burned and it really took them off their feet for over a year. Steven's relationship with " Joe FU**IN Perry " is much like the Mick- Keith thing.
Regardless, they've earned their wings, and have etched their spot in rock history. I've seen maybe a dozen of their shows over the years, some better than others, but always very enjoyable. Tyler is a top shelf performer and he is right in saying that he has been the glue, holding them together by demanding a higher level of production. I hope they can work it out and do another great cd and tour. I'm being selfish because I'd love to see a few more shows.
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whitem8
Seasons and Get Your Wings are fantastic. Really they had a great run of albums from their debut up to Night in the Ruts (right in the nuts!). Draw the Line and NITR have a few weak songs, but are still quite good and feature the entire original line up. Their post Rock in a Hard Place stuff just didn't grab me much. Very polished, ghost writers, and the dreaded power ballads. I remember reading an interview with Brad Whitford in the later years where he bemoans the fact that hey never writes with Taylor or Perry anymore, and he felt the core creative energy of the group has dissipated. And it is hard to argue that point. I can listen to one or two songs off there later releases and combine them all to one ok album. Perry still has the chops and Tyler still can belt it out, but he seems to dominate the creative process with not always rewarding results. Honkin from Bobo was one of their best releases since Night in the Ruts, and those were all covers! Says a lot.
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whitem8
Ok, bad choice of words, not a ghost writer, a hired gun. When they never needed that before when they included Whitford and Perry and Tylor actually wrote together. Bringing in the hired guns seemed to be quite calculated to maximize their commercial appeal, and possibly indicative of a loss of collaboration and ideas from the former core group of writers...
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whitem8
But seriously, if Aerosmtih didn't want them, or didn't need them, Geffen wouldn't have brought them in...
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whitem8
I don't know, I hear Done With Mirrors as a shadow of what Aerosmith was, and it was profoundly sad at the time. Again, Tyler also seemed to embrace the thought of retiring in style riding the success cash cow. IT all felt plastic and sterile. There is no way they didn't jump on that wagon with very little argument to get the hit they needed. I saw them on the Done with Mirrors tour and they were very good live, which saved their image a bit for me. The nadir of it all, though, was Rock and Hard Place, I loathed Crespo's hallow tawdry mimicing of Perry.
I was fortunate enough to see Perry on his I've Got the Rock n' Rolls Again, and that for me was the heart and soul of Aerosmith... a full on raunchy rock fest with some great songs. Far better and far less popular than Aerosmith at that time. I remember it was a small club in Ann Arbor and you could see him walk to his amp and do lines. I have know doubt that Perry and Tyler brought out each others' demons. The toxic twins.
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whitem8
I was fortunate enough to see Perry on his I've Got the Rock n' Rolls Again, and that for me was the heart and soul of Aerosmith... a full on raunchy rock fest with some great songs. Far better and far less popular than Aerosmith at that time. I remember it was a small club in Ann Arbor and you could see him walk to his amp and do lines.
when the reporter asked Joe if he liked Steven as a person and he had to stop and think about it.How old are you, 12? The Beatles shared the mic, too. Are they ripping off the Stones? I'm sure plenty of other acts shared the mic before them, as well. The Stones don't own the rights to microphone sharing.Quote
mickscarey
1. Stones rip offs in every way. Microphone sharing

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mickschix
I can hear all of the gentlemen here with the BOO HISS but if you'd watched Tyler's interview with Oprah about a month ago you would have seen a very different guy; he was sensitive, acknowledging his faults and he really explained all of his demons...