1964
- Steven Tyler forms his first "serious" band, Thee Strangers,
in Sunapee NH. Tyler would later change the band's name to Chain
Reaction, writing songs with their keyboard player, Don Solomon (with
whom he co-wrote "Woman of the World"). The band also covers
Beatles, Stones, Animals and Yard birds
12/23/2001 Barry Shapiro left a message in the guestbook here at Rock
This Way, correcting some wrong info previously posted here:
Though Tyler was originally A drummer, he did NOT play drums for
either the Strangers or the Chain Reaction, unlike reported
elsewhere. How did he know this? Barry was the drummer for both
"Thee Strangers" and the "Chain Reaction" from
1965 through 1967 when the group disbanded shortly after he left the
group. Their recording of 'WHEN I NEEDED YOU' is the original
recording and it is on the box set "PANDORA'S BOX"....
Shapiro is playing the drums on that recording. Though the group
changed personnel over the three years, the core (Steve, Don Solomon
(keyboards), Peter Stahl (lead guitar and/or bass) and himself
(drums)) maintained.
Once Barry Shapiro joined the group in 1965 their first performance
was opening for the BYRDS at Westchester County Center in White
Plains, New York.
1966
- At the age of 18, Steven Tyler enters the studio for the first time
with his band Chain Reaction. They record two singles:
"The Sun / When I Needed You" (Date) and
"You Should Have Been Here Yesterday / Ever Lovin' Man"
(Verve)
- Meanwhile, Perry and Hamilton form a combo, "Pipe Dream"
in Sunapee, NH which by 1969 had become the blues-based, free-form
"Jam Band"
1967-68
- March - Chain Reaction opens 4 shows for the Yardbirds One
Yardbirds set, at New York's Anderson Theater, is recorded and released
as the controversial "Live Yardbirds"
- October - NYC - Tyler, still with Chain Reaction, guests in
the studio on backup vocals with The Left Bank, who had a hit with
"Walk Away Rene"
"He was hungry and a good singer, so I put him on there"
- Tom Finn - Bass Player, The Left Bank
1969
- Chain Reaction play occasional high profile gigs, opening for The
Beach Boys (Iona College,) and the last lineup of Yardbirds with Jimmy
Page (Staples High School in Connecticut)
- Chain Reaction and the Jam Band both play gigs at Sunapee, NH's
"The Barn". Tyler witnesses the Jam Band playing Fleetwood
Mac's "Rattlesnake Shake"
- "They did this song so well that I knew if I could get together
with these guys, we could pull the same feeling off with some songs I
wrote, so I got together with them...I loved Joe's style". He
always played out of tune and real sloppy and I just loved it."
- Steven Tyler interview Circus Magazine 6/75
- Aerosmith's most vital and (often) most overlooked element was
synthesized in this union. The Jam Band's wild, unadulterated improv-ability
was successfully merged with Chain Reaction's tight, disciplined control
to produce the furious but steady blast we know as Aerosmith
1970
- Aerosmith is well received at their first public appearance, playing
at Nipmuc Regional High School in Mendon, MA in the late fall
- The newly named Aerosmith play gigs outside of Boston University's
Student Union building recognizing that getting close to their fans is
the key to success. Sharing an apartment at 1325 Commonwealth Avenue in
Boston, the band defines itself in the best possible conditions for a
young rock n' roll band to do so
"There were six of us in the group, some of us were living in
the kitchen, eating brown rice and Campbell's soup. Those days, you
know, when a quart of beer was heaven. It was hard times and it was
really good. During lunch we would set up all our equipment outside of
BU, in the main square and just started wailing. That's basically how
we got billed. We never got much publicity in the magazines and
newspapers."
- Steven Tyler interview Circus Magazine 6/75
1971
- Guitarist Ray Tabano leaves the band to return years later as a member
of the crew, then Director of Marketing during which time he launched
the first Aerosmith fan club and worked on developing their merchandise
- Tabano is replaced by Brad Whitford who cut his eye-teeth in rock
n' roll at age 16, playing with Teapot Dome, Earth, Inc. and Cymbals of
Resistance
- At this point the band is earning about $300 a night and dodging
eviction notices and stealing food from supermarkets to survive. Still
an unsigned local band, they compete for local press with others like J.
Geils and The Modern Lovers
- The band's formative years are not without that most needed element
in any successful rock band's history - sheer luck. They had worked damn
hard and the payoff was on it's way
- John O'Toole lets Aerosmith practice free of charge in the Fenway
Theater. He takes a liking to the band and brings in his friend Frank
Connoly, the first person of some commercial significance to have more
than a passing hunch about the bands potential -
"Frank was the first guy who knew, he was the one who said we
were on to something"
- Brad Whitford
1972
- Steven Tallarico changes his name to Steven Tyler
- Summer - Aerosmith lands a $125,000 deal with Columbia,
following a show an New York's Max's Kansas City, when Clive Davis saw
them play. The song "No Suprize" chronicles this event
- The band enters Intermedia Sound studios to record Aerosmith their
classic self titled debut LP, produced by Adrian Barber. The album was
recorded and mixed in just 2 weeks
1973
- January - The first album, Aerosmith, is released on
Columbia Records.
- The band begins touring in support of the first album, opening for
the likes of Mott the Hoopla, The Kinks, Hawkwind and Mahavishnu
Orchestra
- The first LP sells faster than any other album in Boston at the
time and gets an outstanding review from Creem Magazine, while
going largely unnoticed by other mainstream media
- June - "Dream On" / "Somebody" released
as a single. "Dream On" gets #1 song of the year at 2 popular
Boston radio stations (WVBF - Framingham, and WBCN - Boston)
1974
- March - The band finish recording Get Your Wings at the
Record Plant in New York and release the first single, - Same Old Song
And Dance / "Pandora's Box" is released
- Circus Magazine gives Get Your Wings the first mention as
one of the year's "Ace Albums"
- Circus Magazine runs an article on Aerosmith
- April - Letter to the Editors of Circus Magazine -
"Let's have more on a fantastic group called Aerosmith. They are
very well-known in Boston and New York. Their hit single "Dream
On" is the number one song of the year on two popular FM
stations. They were also recently on tour with Mott the Hoople, and
they put on an incredible show! Lead singer Steven Tyler really knows
how to please the audience, and I hope in coming issues I'll hear more
about them.
-Ann Marie Foley, Waltham, MA
- September - "Train Kept a Rollin' / "Spaced" (a
leftover from their days performing as Chain Reaction) is released as a
single
1975 - 76
- Early '75 - Get Your Wings goes Gold
- February - "S.O.S. (Too Bad)" / "Spaced"
is released
- April - Toys in the Attic, recorded in NY at the Record
Plant, breaks The Top 20
- May - "Sweet Emotion" / "Uncle Salty" is
released, charting into Billboard's Top 40
- August - "Walk This Way" / "Round And
Round" is released
- November - "You See Me Cryin'" / "Toys In The
Attic" is released
- Aerosmith continues touring heavily as the venues get larger. Press
coverage begins to blossom
- Aerosmith plays before a crowd of 80,000 in the Detroit Lion's
Stadium, Pontiac Michigan
- Cover of The Boston Phoenix dawns a picture of Steven Tyler
in a black lace top with the accompanying headline; "Boston's
Biggest Export"
- Aerosmith becomes a headlining act, and along with ZZ Top and KISS,
one of the top concert attractions in the country
"We were America's band, we were the garage band that made it
really big - the ultimate party band. We were the guys who you could
actually see. Back then in the seventies, it wasn't like Led Zeppelin
was out there on the road in America all of the time. The Stones
weren't always coming to your town. We were. You could count on us to
come by."
- Joe Perry
- February - Fueled by their recent success, the band begins
recording their fourth album Rocks at The Wherehouse in Waltham, MA and
Record Plant Studios, New York
- May - Rocks, the band's fourth album, often heralded as
their finest, is released and immediately goes platinum
- Cover of Rolling Stone has Steven Tyler lying in bed
flashing his "Ma' Kin" tattoo. The issue features a 6 page
article: "Aerosmith's Wrench Rock, Music for The New Stone
Age."
- The band embarks on 58 City tour of U.S.
- Aerosmith gets voted #1 favorite band and Rocks gets #1 favorite
album in the Reader's Poll, Creem Magazine
- May '76 - "Last Child" / "Combination"
is released
- August - "Home Tonight" / "Pandora's
Box" is released
- November "Walk This Way" / "Uncle Salty" is
released peaking into Billboard's Top 10
- November "Dream On" / "Sweet Emotion" is
released
- "Dream On" reaches #3 in the Billboard Charts
1977
- Early '77, band begins its first tour of the Far East in Japan.
- March - "Back in the Saddle" / "Nobody's
Fault" is released
- The band sets up headquarters in a quiet, converted 300 room
convent known as The Cenacle to record their fifth album, Draw The Line
"Sixty acres with a great big house, I don't know how much it
cost but it was outrageous. We had motorcycles and Porches and we'd go
cruising around the countryside terrorizing everybody. We had all our
friends up there and we'd go shooting off all these guns at the
shooting range, just blasting away. We had a great time up
there."
- Joe Perry Creem Magazine
- Driving back from the studio one night, Joey Kramer crashes his car
- Summer - Aerosmith begins their second European Tour
- October - "Draw The Line" single is released
- December - Draw The Line, released on Columbia Records goes
platinum faster than any previous Aerosmith album
- The band embarks on "Draw The Line Tour" which lasts
through 1978 and early 1979
1978
- Summer - Aerosmith co-headline "California Jam II"
with Ted Nugent, the biggest rock festival of the mid to late 70's, and
are featured on the double album release of the concert
- Aerosmith pays $ 3,650 in bail-money to free fifty-two fans busted
for violating a No-Smoking ordinance during a show at Fort Wayne,
Indiana
- The band continue their ruthless touring schedule throughout the
year
- Aerosmith wraps up the tour playing a show at Boston's
"Paradise" as "Dr. J. Jones and the Interns"
- Tracks recorded live at this show found their way onto Live!
Bootleg
- October - Aerosmith make their Hollywood debut with an
appearance in Robert Stigwood's "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club
Band" movie as the "Future Villain Band"
- Live! Bootleg is released on Columbia Records
"What Live! Bootleg does make clear, as it highlights the best of
their past work, is that Aerosmith really is one of the best hard rock
bands that the U.S. has ever produced. I don't think that they set out
to be an important group: no great messages to get across, no big
causes to champion. They just wanted to be one hot Rock 'n' Roll band,
rooted in the second generation guitar-calisthenics-plus-frontman
approach of their heroes."
- Billy Altman - Creem magazine
1979
- Aerosmith finally slow down after seven solid years of pummeling the
globe
- Aerosmith begin work on their seventh album Night In The Ruts
- After some internal turmoil with the band, Joe Perry leaves
Aerosmith to further pursue "The Joe Perry Project"
- Jimmy Crespo, formerly of Flame replaces Perry on lead guitar
- Aerosmith goes on tour with the new line-up to support Night in the
Ruts
1980
- Aerosmith release Greatest Hits on Columbia Records
- The Joe Perry Project release their debut Let the Music do the
Talking, which earns the band a minor hit with the title cut
- Internal strife continues to plague Aerosmith's progress as Brad
Whitford leaves the band
1981
- Guitarist Brad Whitford teams up with Derek St. Holmes, who had
previously played with Ted Nugent, to record Whitford / St. Holmes
- Rick Dufay replaces Brad Whitford on guitar
- Joe Perry Project releases I've Got The Rock n' Rolls Again
- Steven Tyler spends much of the year recovering from a motorcycle
accident
1982 - 83
- August - Rock In A Hard Place is released on Columbia Records
- The band sets off on the "Rock In A Hard Place Tour" with
Jimmy Crespo and Rick Dufay on guitars. The tour continues into early
1984
- Joe Perry Project Records Once a Rocker, Always a Rocker for
MCA Records
- Brad Whitford reunites with Joe Perry to play live at several shows
1984
- February - Valentine's Day, after a long period of well-publicized
estrangement between Perry and Tyler, Perry and Whitford visit their old
band backstage following an Aerosmith show at Boston's Orpheum Theater.
The wounds start to heal...
- April - The announcement is made that the original Aerosmith
will reunite and tour
- The band teams up with A&R man, John Kalodner, who then signs
them to Geffen. Kalodner continues to be involved to this day
- The reunited Aerosmith begins rehearsing at the Glen Ellen Country
Club in Millis, MA.
"You should have felt the buzz the moment all five of us got
together in the same room for the first time again. We all started
laughin' - it was like the five years had never passed. We knew we'd
made the right move."
- Steven Tyler
- Aerosmith launches their 70-date "Back in the Saddle"
tour
"I know everybody's gonna' ask if we got back together for the
money, and of course we did. No, it's fun to have the money come in,
but the reason is definitely the pleasure we get from playing together
again."
- Joe Perry in a Rolling Stone interview.
- After interviewing the band, one writer observes,
"Hearing Perry and Tyler rap about their career, their enthusiasm
for good, fast, hard, rock 'n' roll, and their good-natured camaraderie,
will dispel any notion that they're just doing it for the money.
Clearly, they are brimming with enthusiasm over their new material,
and the chance to have another crack at being in the center ring of
the rock 'n' roll circus."
- Jim Moran Sweet Potato
- America's radio and TV airwaves are inundated with countless young,
second-wave heavy metal bands, many admittedly indebted to Aerosmith
"We paved the road, so to speak, so why not fucking get in our
cars and drive down it again?"
- Steven Tyler
"The Quiet Riot's and all those guys with the leather and studs
and the stacks of Marshall amps that aren't turned on better watch
out. We are the band your mother warned you about."
- Joe Perry
1985 - 86
- New Year's Eve - Aerosmith culminate their "Back in the
Saddle" Tour with a legendary two-night stand at Boston's Orpheum
Theater
- July - Aerosmith enters the studio to record Done With
Mirrors with Ted Templeman producing
- November - Done With Mirrors is released on Columbia
Records. Aerosmith set out on a world tour in support of their new album
- The band is generally ecstatic about being back together and
touring again
"I feel like it's ten years ago again. I feel like the band never
was and here we are starting out at the beginning again."
- Steve Tyler
- Aerosmith re-enters the charts for the first time in six years,
teaming with Run-DMC for a Rick Rubin-produced re-make of "Walk
This Way", a track that the rappers had been burning up the clubs
with for some time.
1987
"We crawled out from under our problems and got in touch with
ourselves."
- Brad Whitford
- Aerosmith release their ninth studio album Permanent Vacation. Going
Triple-Platinum, the album deservedly restores Aerosmith to a dignified
position in the music business and, more importantly, in the ears and
hearts of the listening public - the fans
"Aerosmith forfeited none of their bad-boy image, and their live
shows were among the best of their long career. Even critics liked
them better the second time around."
- Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll
1988
- September - Aerosmith win their first MTV Music Awards for:
- Best Group Video - "Dude Looks Like A Lady"
- Best Stage Performance in a Video - "Dude Looks Like a
Lady"
- "Rag Doll" and "Angel" land Aerosmith on the
Billboard Charts with "Angel" peaking at #3, tying with
"Dream On's" 1976 re-released as their highest charting single
1989
- September - Pump, their 10th studio album reaches # 5 on the
charts and goes Multi-Platinum
- September - Aerosmith receive MTV Awards Nomination for Best
Heavy Metal Video - "Rag Doll"
- The Making Of Pump - longform video is released
- Things That Go'Pump' In The Night - is released
1990
- Aerosmith takes a well-deserved break and begins writing new material
for the next album
- "What It Takes" hits #9 on the Charts
- August - Donnington Park, England - Aerosmith is joined by
longtime hero Jimmy Page to jam with them onstage for "Train Kept
a' Rollin'", an old Yardbirds classic which Aerosmith had covered
in the Seventies.
- Aerosmith plays a 'secret' gig at London's Marquee club. Jimmy Page
joins them onstage for 6 songs
- September - Aerosmith receives two MTV Music Awards for:
- Best Metal / Hard Rock Video - "Janie's Got A Gun"
- Viewers Choice Award - "Janie's Got A Gun"
1991
- Aerosmith inks a new record deal with Sony Music
- Aerosmith receives a Grammy for "Janie's Got A Gun"
- "Pandora's Box", a 3 CD Box Set, is released
- Aerosmith makes an appearance on "The Simpsons"
- Aerosmith are inducted into The Boston Garden Hall of Fame
- September - Aerosmith wins MTV Music Awards:
- Best Metal / Hard Rock Video - "The Other Side"
1992
- Aerosmith wins, "Outstanding Rock Band" and "Best Rock
Video" at the Boston Music Awards
- In the fight against censorship, Aerosmith gives $10,000 to the
List Visual Arts Center at MIT in Boston, to fund a sexually explicit
exhibition of photographs and sculptures for which the National
Endowment For The Arts had pulled support
- Aerosmith shoots the "Rock The Vote" video for a massive,
national TV campaign encouraging America's youth to vote in the
Presidential elections
1993
- Get A Grip is released, shooting to #1 on the charts and selling over
5 million copies
- September - Aerosmith plays Long Island's Jones Beach
Theater and New York's Madison Square Garden, inspiring Newsday's
Ira Robbins to write:
"Whatever it is that fuels Aerosmith's unforgettable fire
after all these years (carrot juice? pasta? Milk of Magnesia?) must
have been plentifully stocked backstage. The band's live sets at the
time were only building more momentum as their new lifestyles fired
them into a natural oblivion on stage."
- Sony/Columbia reissues all twelve of the band's Columbia releases
in Box of Fire box set
- Aerosmith wins MTV Music Awards:
- Viewer's Choice Award for "Livin' On The Edge"
- The band scores Billboard hits with "Livin' On The Edge",
"Cryin'", "Crazy", and "Amazing", putting
the band back in its rightful place as one of the most popular bands in
the world.
1994
- August - Aerosmith gives a stunning performance at Woodstock '94
headlining Saturday nights' show, which also featured Metallica, Blind
Mellon and Nine Inch Nails, in a torrential downpour that was followed
by a spectacular fireworks display.
- 'Get A Grip' World Tour steamrolls through North America, Canada,
Europe, and Japan
- Aerosmith performs "Livin' on The Edge" at the Grammy
Awards with the song winning "Best Performance by a Duo or a
Group"
- Aerosmith wins three MTV Music Awards:
- #1 All Time Favorite Video as voted by MTV viewers - "Cryin'"
- Best Video - "Cryin'"
- Best Group Video - "Cryin'"
- Viewer's Choice Award - "Cryin'"
- Aerosmith honored at "People's Choice Awards"
- Aerosmith honored at American Music Awards
- Aerosmith stars in their own video arcade game, Revolution X
- Aerosmith tours Latin America for the first time, headlining the
Hollywood Rocks Festival in Rio in addition to playing their own stadium
shows in Argentina
1995-96
- Aerosmith win their Third Grammy at the 37th Annual Grammy Awards for
"Best Performance By A Duo or Group with Vocal" -
"Crazy"
1997
They release Nine Lives, Made in America and their autobiography
"Walk this way" and tours all around the world
1998
Steven Hurts his knee when his mike stand smashes into it on a concert.
forcing the band to cancel the whole European Summer tour and postpone
the North American Leg
Aerosmith records 2 new songs: "I Don't Want to Miss a
Thing" and "What Kind of Love are You on" for the Movie
Soundtrack "Armageddon" (Starring Liv Tyler) which also has 2
classic Aerosmith songs: "Sweet Emotion" and "Come
Together"
- July - Joey Kramer's Ferrari catches fire while getting it refueled
at a gas station. Joey got out of his car shielding his face
from the flames with his arms. but gets second-degree burns on his left
arm and minor burns on his legs. this leads to that they have to
reschedule the first 13 dates of their upcoming 50 show US tour
- October - Joe Perry makes his Acting debut on the NBC TV
series "Homicide - Life on the street"
- October - an Aerosmith Live show from Holmdel NJ was
broadcasted in RealAudio and RealVideo over the Internet on October
17th. what really made this event unique was the viewers' ability to
direct the special themselves, switching live between seven separate
camera feeds, each broadcasting a different perspective of the concert.
Prior to the Cybercast, the band was participating in a chat with
America Online giving the fans a chance to Chat with the band
- October - The 2-CD live Album "A Little South of
Sanity" is released