logo
Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler 'doesn't want to tour' and 'can't tour', according to Joe Perry

Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler 'doesn't want to tour' and 'can't tour', according to Joe Perry

Perth Nowa day ago
Steven Tyler "doesn't want to tour and can't tour," according to bandmate Joe Perry.
Only last month, the legendary rock band's guitarist suggested they could make their live return.
He has now cast doubt on the band hitting the road, given Tyler's serious vocal injury that saw him fracture his larynx as well as having damaged vocal cords.
However, Perry hasn't completely ruled out one final show and suggested it could be part of a documentary they are in talks for.
He told WBUR: 'I would bet that there's an Aerosmith show left.
'There's been talk about doing a documentary; that might be part of it. I've been spending a lot of time with Steven and he just doesn't want to tour, and he can't tour.'
He admitted: 'It's tough. I'm not sure I would want to go out and book another 40-city tour. It's a long way to the top and staying there takes it out of you, especially an Aerosmith tour."
During an appearance on SiriusXM's Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk in July, Perry was asked if fans could ever see Aerosmith on stage again, to which the musician replied: "Well, yeah, I'm always hoping, but going on the road, it's a big deal pulling that together.'
Perry, 74, also admitted that touring is now much more demanding for him and his Aerosmith bandmates because they are not young men anymore.
He added: "There's so much planning, and what it takes out of you physically, it's a lot more than people realise."
'It's one thing when you're doing it when you're 25 or 30, but it's another when you're starting to get up there like us. It's a really physical thing, going out on stage.'
Love in an Elevator songwriter Perry is sure that Tyler would be able to sing a full concert again if he could get the strength back in his voice.
Asked if he could perform a full show, Perry said: "You know, I think he would. I think it's just a matter of getting there, you know? I mean, it's like, you know, I mean, we're up there, man.
"I've got enough left in me. I still wanna do [a final Aerosmith show]... So, we'll see what happens.'
Tyler, 77, made his first public performance since Aerosmith announced their retirement in January when he sang at a Janie's Fund charity event.
Perry is touring across the US this summer with his group The Joe Perry Project.
Aerosmith announced their retirement from touring in August 2024 due to Tyler's inability to sing live due to his injury.
The band's statement read: "As you know, Steven's voice is an instrument like no other.
"He has spent months tirelessly working on getting his voice to where it was before his injury. We've seen him struggling despite having the best medical team by his side.
"Sadly, it is clear that a full recovery from his vocal injury is not possible. We have made a heart-breaking and difficult, but necessary, decision – as a band of brothers – to retire from the touring stage."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

KJ Apa 'forced to get sober' when son was born
KJ Apa 'forced to get sober' when son was born

Perth Now

time36 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

KJ Apa 'forced to get sober' when son was born

KJ Apa was "forced to get sober" after becoming a dad. The 28-year-old actor admitted the birth of his four-year-old son Sasha - who he has with former partner Clara Berry - made him look carefully at his life and make a lot of changes. Speaking to Andy Cohen on his SiriusXM show Radio Andy, KJ said: 'It forced me to chill. It also forced me to get sober. 'A lot of things that I realised I had to button up, I buttoned up. Yes, and I realised that there's no other way for me to do it.' AJ admitted he got "lost" in the trappings of fame when his show Riverdale became successful and spent a lot of time partying until his son came along and "saved" him. He said: "Sasha being a gift that saved my life. I truly believe having Sasha saved my life. 'You know you have a kid and then suddenly you understand the idea of murder, you know that, like you can empathise with why someone would kill someone... 'Because you love someone so much. And that's the same feeling that I go, 'I love you so much more than me.' I have to sacrifice all these things for you. And that's what a good parent does.' KJ also reflected on becoming a dad at the age of 24, noting many of his friends are not yet at that stage in their lives. He said: 'It comes with its pros and cons." The actor was first romantically linked to Clara in 2019 but in May 2024, she confirmed they were no longer together and "everything is better". She explained on a Q+A on social media: 'I think it's better to have parents, who are separated, who are happy and who can be the best version of themselves, than staying together in a situation that it not working." However, although Clara noted things were "going well" in co-parenting with KJ, she also admitted it wasn't always an easy situation to deal with. She said: 'I am not with my son 50 percent of the time and therefore won't know 50 percent of his life. That is something that is hard to accept."

Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler 'doesn't want to tour' and 'can't tour', according to Joe Perry
Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler 'doesn't want to tour' and 'can't tour', according to Joe Perry

Perth Now

timea day ago

  • Perth Now

Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler 'doesn't want to tour' and 'can't tour', according to Joe Perry

Steven Tyler "doesn't want to tour and can't tour," according to bandmate Joe Perry. Only last month, the legendary rock band's guitarist suggested they could make their live return. He has now cast doubt on the band hitting the road, given Tyler's serious vocal injury that saw him fracture his larynx as well as having damaged vocal cords. However, Perry hasn't completely ruled out one final show and suggested it could be part of a documentary they are in talks for. He told WBUR: 'I would bet that there's an Aerosmith show left. 'There's been talk about doing a documentary; that might be part of it. I've been spending a lot of time with Steven and he just doesn't want to tour, and he can't tour.' He admitted: 'It's tough. I'm not sure I would want to go out and book another 40-city tour. It's a long way to the top and staying there takes it out of you, especially an Aerosmith tour." During an appearance on SiriusXM's Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk in July, Perry was asked if fans could ever see Aerosmith on stage again, to which the musician replied: "Well, yeah, I'm always hoping, but going on the road, it's a big deal pulling that together.' Perry, 74, also admitted that touring is now much more demanding for him and his Aerosmith bandmates because they are not young men anymore. He added: "There's so much planning, and what it takes out of you physically, it's a lot more than people realise." 'It's one thing when you're doing it when you're 25 or 30, but it's another when you're starting to get up there like us. It's a really physical thing, going out on stage.' Love in an Elevator songwriter Perry is sure that Tyler would be able to sing a full concert again if he could get the strength back in his voice. Asked if he could perform a full show, Perry said: "You know, I think he would. I think it's just a matter of getting there, you know? I mean, it's like, you know, I mean, we're up there, man. "I've got enough left in me. I still wanna do [a final Aerosmith show]... So, we'll see what happens.' Tyler, 77, made his first public performance since Aerosmith announced their retirement in January when he sang at a Janie's Fund charity event. Perry is touring across the US this summer with his group The Joe Perry Project. Aerosmith announced their retirement from touring in August 2024 due to Tyler's inability to sing live due to his injury. The band's statement read: "As you know, Steven's voice is an instrument like no other. "He has spent months tirelessly working on getting his voice to where it was before his injury. We've seen him struggling despite having the best medical team by his side. "Sadly, it is clear that a full recovery from his vocal injury is not possible. We have made a heart-breaking and difficult, but necessary, decision – as a band of brothers – to retire from the touring stage."

The Perth artists using technology to give a new perspective on the city's shot-hole borer toll
The Perth artists using technology to give a new perspective on the city's shot-hole borer toll

The Age

time3 days ago

  • The Age

The Perth artists using technology to give a new perspective on the city's shot-hole borer toll

Cassandra Tyler's pitch to her fellow Perth creatives couldn't be more madcap: 'I want to make a musical about the shot-hole borer.' However, Tyler's idea for a musical was not the kind that would play at Crown Theatre but an experimental piece using the sounds of Hyde Park, which has lost about 20 per cent of its trees due to the polyphagous shot-hole borer. The work created by Tyler, W. Tse Sang and Catherine Gough-Brady aims to trigger a strong emotional response and make the people of Perth feel deeply for the loss of thousands of trees. 'People know what's happening from a scientific point of view. We understand that thousands of trees have been chopped down,' Tyler said. 'And we know that the battle is lost and all we can do is wait until the trees fall down or they're cut down. But we don't feel that loss. It is something apart from us.' Loading However, there is a lot more going on in the trio's piece ARia Song Unseen, one of three new immersive art works developed under an innovative program created by the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts called boorda yeyi (a Noongar phrase meaning 'future now'). In their project, Tyler, Sang and Gough-Brady work with AR – or augmented reality – in which participants are given a tablet and headphones and invited to circle a bag of woodchips which, through the tech, is overlaid the ghost-like image of the Moreton Bay figs that have been cut down, along with the sounds of Hyde Park. Tyler, a multidisciplinary artist who moved across from Melbourne, was moved to make a work about the shot-hole borer that is wreaking havoc across Perth and is now threatening trees in the eastern states when she saw a connection between the ravenous bug and the colonisation of Australia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store