Here`s a review from The Associated Press of Steven Tyler`s "Does The Noise In My Head Bother You?": 
Like that night in 1978 when he blacked out on stage while singing  "Reefer-Headed Woman." Or when he and Aerosmith visited the White House  on the day President Bill Clinton was impeached. Or that weird weekend  with Keith Richards at Bing Crosby's old house on Long Island. Everyone,  Tyler writes, "was gacked to the nines on coke."
The Associated  Press purchased a copy on Thursday of "Does the Noise in My Head Bother  You?", scheduled for release next week. Explicit and filled with  expletives, it reads like an even wilder and louder version of Richards'  best-selling "Life." Tyler, 63, settles back and tells story after  story about life in the "most decadent, lecherous, sexiest, nastiest  band in the land."
Or as Tyler states it: "To snort or not to snort. That wasn't even a question."
The  road was so crazy that Tyler can't remember how many times he was  arrested. He recalls visiting Paul and Linda McCartney backstage with  Bebe Buell, the mother of Tyler's daughter, Liv. Buell and Linda  McCartney do not hit it off. Buell calls her "Sluggo." McCartney answers  "Sluggett." They wrestle to the floor. But the men are cool. "I like  your music, man," Paul says.
A native of Yonkers, N.Y., Tyler was  born Steve Victor Tallarico in 1948. He remembers hearing Elvis Presley  as a little kid, and feeling like he was "bitten by a radioactive  spider." By age 15, he knew he wanted to be a rock star and he knew he  liked to get high, mastering the art of rigging his bedroom door so he  wouldn't get caught smoking pot. At age 16, lightning hits — someone  tells him he looks just like that rubber-lipped singer from the Rolling  Stones, Mick Jagger. By the late 1960s, he has met the other members of  Aerosmith and hung out with them at Woodstock. They get their first  record deal in 1972. Their self-titled debut album comes out the  following year.
The band's name was suggested by drummer Joey  Kramer. They had considered Stit Jane, or the Hookers (Tyler's idea).  Kramer mentioned "Arrowsmith." Like the novel by Sinclair Lewis? No,  Aerosmith, a-e-r-o. Perfect, "The name evoked space — aerodynamics,  supersonic thrust, Mach II, the sound barrier."
Tyler describes  working on such classics as "Dream On," written at a Hilton Hotel near  the airport in Boston and a touchstone for his own life, with its  warning that "Maybe tomorrow the good Lord will take you away." Another  favorite, "Sweet Emotion," was inspired by his "anger and jealousy" over  guitarist Joe Perry's moving out to live with his girlfriend. "Walk  This Way" was partially inspired by Mel Brooks' horror spoof "Young  Frankenstein" and the famous line uttered by Marty Feldman. The band  cracked up and a song was born.
He's a born bragger, but he's  willing to kick himself, too. Tyler is open about his battles with  Perry, a bond "fraught to say the least." They are "soul mates" who  might not speak for months, brothers caught up in "moments of ecstasy  and periods of pure rage." But that's OK with Tyler, who reasons that  all rock stars are egomaniacs and that you wouldn't want to be stuck  with "clones of yourself."
Sober now, Tyler has been in rehab  often enough that he lists the treatment facilities, eight of them, from  Hazelden to the Betty Ford center. Drugs were bad for his health, his  spirit, his wallet. "I snorted my Porsche, I snorted my plane," he  confesses.
He cleaned up a few years ago but relapsed after the  death of his beloved mother, Susie, in 2008. He gives a  "moment-by-moment" recap of the summer night in 2009 when he fell off a  stage in South Dakota. ("I zigged when I should have zagged.") His band  mates didn't call him for 27 weeks and looked for a new singer.
"I got chastised for falling off the stage high," he remarks.
He  writes briefly about joining "American Idol." He was touring in France  in June 2010 when he got a text from "Idol" judge Kara DioGuardi  wondering if he wanted to give the show a try. "Like a dummy," Tyler  recalls, he asked only how high were the ratings. Very high. His inner  voice tells him, "Yeah, I'll do it."
Tyler signed on before  telling the band. He remembers Perry barging into his dressing room,  furious that he learned about it from the press. But that's all "water  under the bridge," Tyler says. The tour was "beyond successful" and if  he bombs on "Idol" he still has a day job, "And, boy, what a day job I  got!"

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment