Steven tyler on going country and the future of aerosmith

Steven tyler on going country and the future of aerosmith


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"I think country is the new rock & roll — everyone is trying to stretch out" As a child spending his summers in New Hampshire, Steven Tyler would run a 50-foot wire from the


back of his radio to the top of an apple tree in order to pick up WOWO, a Fort Wayne, Indiana, station that would play some of his favorite country songs. “I’d listen to things like Johnny


Horton’s ‘The Battle of New Orleans,’ ” Tyler says. “I loved the Everly Brothers, Duane Eddy, Jerry Lee Lewis.” More than half a century later, Tyler is connecting with his childhood love by


cutting a country album in Nashville. He just released a single, “Love Is Your Name,” which debuted at Number 33 on the _Billboard_ Country Airplay chart, and he hopes to wrap the album


after Aerosmith finish a summer tour in August. “I feel like a kid who just got laid for the first time,” says Tyler, 67. “Sometimes doing the same-old same-old gets a little constricting.”


What drew you to Nashville? I was here two years ago to present at a few awards shows, and I just fell in love with the place. I met [Big Machine Records CEO] Scott Borchetta. He offered to


sign me to his label, and the rest is history. Nashville is a mecca of song-age. I feel like one of the Three Wise Men that saw the star falling into Bethlehem. Did you worry that some


Aerosmith fans aren’t going to accept you going country? I might have, for a minute. It was kind of like taking _American_ _Idol_. I thought, “Would Bob Dylan have taken _Idol_?” But my


heart and my muse sent me here. IF DYLAN CAN WRITE _NASHVILLE SKYLINE_ . . . You know what I tell Aerosmith fans? Live with it. They don’t know that Dan Hicks is huge for me, and I listened


to him while making our first album. It’s one of the things that spurred “Big Ten Inch Record.” ARE THERE OTHER AEROSMITH SONGS WITH A BIG COUNTRY INFLUENCE? “Cryin’.” Listen to the lyrics.


It was country — we just Aerosmith’d it. And how about “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing”? Mark Chesnutt put out a country version and had a Number One hit. EDITOR’S PICKS WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE


BETWEEN ROCK AND COUNTRY AT THIS POINT? Country songs really spell out what’s on a guy’s mind in no uncertain terms. Rock & roll can be a little more aloof. But country is changing.


Jaren Johnston and the Cadillac Three and Florida Georgia Line are proving that you can go any which way. Modern country might add a little a cappella or raps or heavier beats. God knows


Brad Paisley plays guitar like a motherfucker. I think country is the new rock & roll — everyone is trying to stretch out.