Steven Tyler (born Steven
Victor Tallarico; March 26, 1948) is an American singer, songwriter, and
multi-instrumentalist, best known as the frontman and lead singer of the
Boston-based rock band Aerosmith, in which he also plays the harmonica, and
occasional piano and percussion. He is known as the "Demon of
Screamin'" due to his high screams and his wide vocal range. He is also
known for his on-stage acrobatics. During his high-energy performances, he
usually dresses in bright, colorful outfits with his trademark scarves hanging
from his microphone stand. In the 1970s, Tyler rose to prominence as the
frontman of Aerosmith, which released such milestone hard rock albums as Toys
in the Attic and Rocks. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Tyler had
a heavy drug and alcohol addiction, and the band's popularity waned.
He completed drug
rehabilitation in 1986 and subsequently maintained sobriety for over 20 years,
but had a relapse with prescription painkillers in the late 2000s, for which he
successfully received treatment in 2009. After Aerosmith launched a remarkable
comeback in the late 1980s and early 1990s with the albums Permanent
Vacation, Pump, and Get a Grip, Tyler became a household name
and has remained a relevant rock icon. As a result, he has since embarked on
several solo endeavors including guest appearances on other artists' music,
film and TV roles (including as a judge on American Idol), authoring a
bestselling book, and solo work (including a Top 40 hit single in 2011).
However, he has continued to record music and perform with Aerosmith, after
more than 43 years in the band. The band's latest album, Music from Another
Dimension!, was released on November 6, 2012.
Tyler is included among RollingStone's 100 Greatest Singers. He was also ranked 3rd on Hit Parader's
Top 100 Metal Vocalists of All Time. In 2001 he was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame with Aerosmith, and he was the presenter when AC/DC was
inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2003. In 2013, Tyler and his songwriting
partner Joe Perry will be recipients of the ASCAP Founders Award and will also
be inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
Early life
Steven Victor Tallarico was
born on March 26, 1948, in Yonkers, New York, the son of Susan Ray (née
Blancha; June 2, 1925 – July 4, 2008), a secretary, and Victor A. Tallarico
(May 14, 1916 – September 10, 2011), a classical musician and pianist. His
father was of Italian and German descent, while his mother was of Polish and
English ancestry. His grandfather, who was from the Russian partition of former
Poland, changed his surname from "Czarnyszewicz" (from the Polish czarny
'black') to "Blancha" (from the French blanche or
Catalan/Spanish blanca 'white'). Tyler attended Roosevelt High School
and Leonard Quintano for Young Professionals School.
Career
Formation
and success of Aerosmith (1970–1978)
Before Aerosmith was formed,
Tyler wrote what would become one of Aerosmith's signature songs, "Dream
On". In 1969, Tyler attended a local rock show in Sunapee, New Hampshire where
he first saw future bandmates Joe Perry (guitars) and Tom Hamilton (Bass), who
at the time were playing in a band called the Jam Band. Tyler later stated he
was struck by their raw power and attitude. Around 1970, Tyler, Perry and
Hamilton decided to form a band. However, Tyler, who had typically performed
drums in many of his previous bands, insisted that he be the frontman and lead
singer, Joey Kramer, a friend of Tyler's from New York, was recruited to play
drums. They also added Tyler's boyhood friend Ray Tabano as a second guitarist.
The band moved to Boston and shared a small apartment on Commonwealth Avenue in
Brighton. Tabano was replaced by Brad Whitford in 1971.
After spending time on the
Boston club circuit under the tutelage of their first manager, Frank Connelly,
the band began working with New York managers Steve Leber and David Krebs.
Leber describes the band as "the closest thing I've ever seen to the
Rolling Stones." In October 1971, the managers arranged the gig at the legendary
nightclub Max's Kansas City to showcase the group to record company executives.
They subsequently signed a record deal with Columbia Records in 1971 and
released their eponymous debut album in 1973. This was followed by Get Your
Wings in 1974. Around this time, Aerosmith continued to tour wherever they
could, and opened for bands like Mott the Hoople. The band had a minor hit in
"Dream On", which peaked at No. 59 in 1973, but it wasn't until the
back-to-back releases of Toys in the Attic (1975) and Rocks
(1976) that Aerosmith broke into the mainstream. In 1975, they achieved their
first Top 40 hit in "Sweet Emotion". Soon after, "Dream On"
was rereleased and hit No. 6 in 1976, followed by another Top 10 hit "Walk
This Way". Additionally, Rocks produced the hit singles "Last
Child", "Back in the Saddle", and "Home Tonight". By
1976, Aerosmith found themselves headlining huge stadiums and major rock music
festivals. That year, Tyler emerged as a prominent rock star and sex symbol in
his own right, gracing the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. 1977's Draw
the Line continued the band's success, and they were catapulted to
international fame and recognition, launching tours in Europe and Japan. A
series of Hot 100 hits continued throughout the remainder of the decade, including
"Draw the Line", "Kings and Queens", and "Chip Away
the Stone". Aerosmith's first five albums have also all since gone
multiplatinum, and all five are considered to be among the greatest hard rock
albums of all time. Aerosmith toured heavily throughout the mid to late 1970s,
and their live shows during this time period were captured through 1978's live
album Live! Bootleg and the 1989 VHS release Live Texxas Jam '78.
1978 also saw Tyler make his acting debut as the leader of the Future Villain
Band in the film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, alongside his
fellow Aerosmith bandmates. The film also spawned Aerosmith's cover of the
Beatles hit "Come Together", which would be Aerosmith's last Top 40
single for nine years.
Decline of
Aerosmith (1979–1983)
As the decade wore on, the
fast-paced life of touring, recording, living together, and using drugs began
to take its toll on the band. Tyler and Perry often were called the Toxic Twins
for their legendary intake of stimulants and heroin. Their relationship is well
documented in many of Aerosmith's video releases as well as in the Aerosmith Behind
the Music. On July 28, 1979, after a huge fight at a World Series of Rock
concert in Cleveland, Perry left Aerosmith to begin his own band, The Joe Perry
Project. Night in the Ruts was released that fall, and Aerosmith forged
on with new guitarist Jimmy Crespo.
In the fall of 1980, Tyler
was injured in a serious motorcycle crash that left him hospitalized for two
months and unable to tour or record for much of 1981. When the band re-convened
to begin recording, Tyler formed a writing partnership with Crespo, co-writing
and producing the album Rock in a Hard Place (1982). Brad Whitford had
left in 1981, shortly after recording the guitar parts for the album's lead
single, "Lightning Strikes". Whitford was replaced by Rick Dufay, and
the band continued to tour into 1983. Tyler's drug abuse increasingly became
problematic. His heroin addiction was at its worst between 1979 and 1982 when
he would roam the streets of New York City looking for dealers.
Reuniting
and getting clean (1984–1986)
On February 14, 1984, Perry
and Whitford, who left the band in 1979 and 1981 respectively, showed up at an
Aerosmith show. According to the band's Behind the Music special on VH1,
Tyler alleges he made the first phone call to Perry encouraging them to meet up
again. Backstage, they all met, and Perry and Whitford agreed to join the band
once again. With the new reunion, the band also fired their managers Leber and
Krebs, hired new manager Tim Collins (who was managing Joe Perry) and signed a
new record contract with Geffen Records.
Aerosmith embarked on a
reunion tour, the "Back in the Saddle Tour", and proceeded to record
once again, releasing Done with Mirrors in 1985. The band was still
using drugs, however, especially Tyler, who collapsed at a show in Springfield,
Illinois, on the 1984 tour. In 1986, the band held a meeting in which the band
members staged an intervention on Tyler and convinced him to enter a drug
rehabilitation program.
After Tyler had successfully
completed rehab, every other member of Aerosmith eventually followed suit; all
had successfully exited their respective programs at various times in the
mid-late 1980s.
Comeback and
superstardom (1986–1999)
Aerosmith rose to prominence
again when Tyler and Perry appeared on Run–D.M.C.'s cover of Aerosmith's
"Walk This Way" in 1986, a track that combined elements of hip-hop
and rock, that broke down the barriers between the two genres, broke rap into
the mainstream, and introduced Aerosmith to a new generation. The track hit
No.4 on the charts and launched a famous music video that saw heavy rotation.
This paved the way for Aerosmith to mount a significant comeback. Tyler and
Perry renewed their songwriting partnership but were now also working with
outside songwriting collaborators brought in by the record company, like
Desmond Child and Jim Vallance. In addition, to help give Aerosmith a slick
sound that would be accessible to mainstream audiences, they were receiving
help from producer Bruce Fairbairn and A&R man John Kalodner. Aerosmith
released Permanent Vacation in 1987, which became a huge multi-platinum
success and launched three Top 20 hits ("Dude (Looks Like a Lady)",
"Angel", and "Rag Doll"). The band launched a tour with the
emerging Guns N' Roses opening many shows. Permanent Vacation was
followed by 1989's Pump, which was even more successful, selling 7
million copies and producing three Top 10 hits ("Love in an
Elevator", "Janie's Got a Gun", and "What it Takes")
and one Top 40 hit ("The Other Side"). Pump in particular saw
Tyler expand his musical horizons, co-writing the innovative hit "Janie's
Got a Gun", which won the band their first Grammy award. The band toured
with many up-and-coming acts and performed in locations like Australia for the
first time. In the late 1980s, Tyler also guested on albums by comedian Sam
Kinison, Alice Cooper (a fellow 70s rocker also launching a successful
comeback) and popular contemporaries Mötley Crüe. Around that time, Tyler and
Perry also appeared at a Bon Jovi concert in Milton Keynes and performed
"Walk This Way".
With the twin successes of Permanent
Vacation and Pump, the band became an MTV sensation and Tyler became
a household name. The band were featured on a "Wayne's World" sketch
on Saturday Night Live in 1990, which is ranked as the No.1 moment of
all time on the show. That same year, Aerosmith recorded one of the first
episodes of MTV Unplugged. In 1991, Aerosmith was one of the first bands
to be featured on The Simpsons. That year, the band also signed a
$30 million record deal with their old label Columbia, which they would
begin recording for later that decade. The box set Pandora's Box was
released by Columbia in late 1991, and the band filmed a music video for
"Sweet Emotion" to promote the release. Earlier in the year, the band
also performed "Dream On" with an orchestra at MTV's 10th Anniversary
celebration; their filmed performance was used as the official video for the
song. After a brief break, the band returned to the studio in 1992 to record
their next album. The band's A&R man John Kalodner criticized some of the
early material being considered for this album, targeting Tyler's sexually
profane lyrics in particular. As Tyler was no longer using drugs, some members
of the band and their management had believed Tyler had now become a sex
addict.
Steven Tyler performing on the Get a Grip Tour in
1993.
However, the band eventually
began recording again and released Get a Grip in 1993, which became
their most successful album worldwide, selling over 15 million copies and
producing a series of hit singles ("Livin' on the Edge",
"Cryin'", "Eat the Rich", "Amazing",
"Crazy"). While the album saw mixed reviews and received some criticism
for over-using outside collaborators, Aerosmith won more awards during this
time than any other, winning two Grammy Awards, four MTV Video Music Awards,
two American Music Awards, a People's Choice award, and a Billboard Award. The
band became well known for their videos at this time, which featured film-like
storylines and up-and-coming actors and actresses like Edward Furlong, Stephen
Dorff, Jason London, Josh Holloway, and most notably Alicia Silverstone.
Tyler's daughter Liv made her acting debut in the band's video for
"Crazy" in 1994. The band also launched their biggest and most
extensive tour yet, performing over 240 shows in nearly 30 countries, including
touring Latin America for the first time and performing in many European countries
for the first time.
After the 18-month long Get
a Grip Tour ended in December 1994, the band took a break in 1995 to spend time
with their families. This break was needed due to the grueling lifestyle of the
previous 10 years under the helm of manager Tim Collins, who helped orchestrate
much of the band's comeback and sustained success. Tyler and Perry also began
writing for a new album, and the band performed a couple one-off shows in
Boston to try out the new material, and vacationed together with their families
in Florida. Aerosmith, however, almost broke up after the band's manager spread
rumors that band members were saying bad things about each other and that Tyler
was being unfaithful to his wife and using drugs again during recording
sessions in Miami. The band subsequently fired Collins in 1996 in the middle of
recording for their next album. In 1997, they released Nine Lives, which
went double platinum, launched three hits ("Falling in Love (Is Hard on
the Knees)", "Hole in My Soul", and "Pink"), and won
the band their fourth Grammy for "Pink". They toured for over two
years in support of the album. In 1997, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry were
featured in a commercial for the Gap. That fall, the band's tell-all
autobiography was released.
In 1998, while on tour in
support of Nine Lives, Tyler suffered a ligament injury when his mic
stand came crashing into his knee. Tyler and the band finished the show, but
they had to cancel several dates, and Tyler had to wear a leg cast while
filming the video for "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing". The song was
the band's first No.1 hit and the only song to date by a rock band to debut at
No.1 on the Hot 100. It has since become a slow-dance staple, and at the time
introduced Aerosmith and Steven Tyler to yet another new generation. The song
was written for the film Armageddon, which featured Tyler's daughter
Liv.
In 1999, Tyler and Perry
joined Kid Rock and Run–D.M.C. to perform "Walk This Way" at the MTV
Video Music Awards. Earlier that year, the band saw the Rock 'n' Roller Coaster
Starring Aerosmith open at Walt Disney World.
Continued
success and touring (2000–2008)
In 2001, Aerosmith played at
the Super Bowl XXXV Halftime Show and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame. The band also released the album Just Push Play, which featured
the Top 10 hit "Jaded". The band went on tour again in the summer of
2001, and since then Aerosmith has toured every year, except 2008. After the
September 11 attacks, the band performed at the benefit concert "United We
Stand" in Washington, D.C. Tyler donned a full-length jacket featuring the
American flag, and the band performed a brief set including "Livin' on the
Edge", "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing", "Just Push
Play", and "Walk This Way". The band flew back to Indianapolis to
perform a show that same night.
In 2002, Aerosmith's
two-hour long Behind the Music was released, chronicling the band's
tumultuous history and current activities and touring. They were also honored
as MTV Icons. In the summer, they released the compilation O, Yeah! The
Ultimate Aerosmith Hits, which went double platinum and included the new
track "Girls of Summer", which spawned a namesake tour with Kid Rock
and Run–D.M.C. opening.
In 2003, Tyler received an
honorary degree from Berklee College of Music, and, in 2005, received an
honorary doctorate from the University of Massachusetts Boston. In 2003, Tyler
also inducted AC/DC into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Tyler sang with AC/DC
frontman Brian Johnson for a performance of "You Shook Me All Night Long".
Later in the year, Tyler went on tour with Aerosmith for the Rocksimus Maximus
Tour with KISS.
In 2004, Aerosmith released
the blues cover album Honkin' on Bobo and launched a brief tour with
Cheap Trick, focused on smaller markets. That summer, Tyler starred in a
commercial for Sony's Cyber-shot camera, which
also included the Aerosmith song "The Grind", a new song featured on Honkin'
on Bobo. Later that year, Tyler sang the National Anthem to kick off the
2004 World Series at Fenway Park. The 2004 film The Polar Express
featured Tyler singing "Rockin' on Top of the World" alongside a
group of computer-animated elves resembling Aerosmith.
In 2005, Tyler sang lead
vocals on Santana's hit single "Just Feel Better" and made a cameo
appearance in the film Be Cool.
In 2006, after recovering
from throat surgery and the grueling Rockin' the Joint Tour, Steven Tyler
performed with Joe Perry and the Boston Pops Orchestra for the orchestra's
annual Fourth of July concert, his first major public appearance since the
surgery. During the concert, which was broadcast nationally on CBS, Tyler,
Perry, and the orchestra performed a medley of "Walk This Way",
"I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" and "Dream On". That year,
Tyler also recorded a duet with country music artist Keith Anderson, titled
"Three Chord Country and American Rock & Roll". The song, a
remixed version of a song found on Anderson's debut album, was released as a
single on the U.S. Hot Country Songs charts.
Later that year, the
Aerosmith compilation Devil's Got a New Disguise was released, which
included two new tracks. Tyler hit the road with Aerosmith again for the Route
of All Evil Tour with Mötley Crüe and also made several more public
appearances. He made a cameo appearance on the sitcom Two and a Half Men,
playing himself. On October 14, 2006, Tyler sang "God Bless America"
during the seventh inning stretch at Game No.3 of the National League
Championship Series between the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets at
Busch Stadium in St. Louis. On November 24, he volunteered by serving
Thanksgiving dinner to the needy at a restaurant in West Palm Beach, Florida,
before an Aerosmith show there.
Tyler performing in 2007
In 2007, Tyler kept active
in Aerosmith with the band's world tour which saw them perform in 19 countries.
Also that year, Tyler and daughter Liv were profiled on E! True Hollywood Story.
On May 21, 2008, Tyler
checked into Las Encinas Hospital rehabilitation clinic in Pasadena,
California, to recover from multiple leg surgeries. He made a public statement
saying that "The 'foot repair' pain was intense, greater than I'd
anticipated. The months of rehabilitative care and the painful strain of
physical therapy were traumatic. I really needed a safe environment to
recuperate where I could shut off my phone and get back on my feet." In
June 2008, Guitar Hero: Aerosmith was released, the franchise's first
video game based solely around one band and the most successful game based
around a band. On July 14, 2008, Tyler's mother, Susan Rey Tallarico, died at
the age of 84. On July 18, 2008, Steven Tyler appeared with Billy Joel at the
last concert to be played at Shea Stadium. Backed by Joel's band, he sang lead
vocals on "Walk This Way". In August 2008 HarperCollins won an
auction to publish Tyler's autobiography. That same month, Tyler performed with
trumpeter Chris Botti in Boston. In December 2008, Tyler made a surprise
appearance at the Trans-Siberian Orchestra concerts at Nassau Coliseum
(December 12, 2008) and the Izod Center (December 13, 2008). At the Izod
Center, he collaborated with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra on "Dream
On" and "Sweet Emotion".
Recent
events (2009–present)
On August 5, 2009, while on
the Guitar Hero Aerosmith Tour, Tyler fell off a stage near Sturgis, South
Dakota, injuring his head and neck and breaking his shoulder. He was airlifted
to Rapid City Regional Hospital. Aerosmith was forced to cancel the rest of
their 2009 tour, except for two shows in Hawaii in October. Back in 2007,
Aerosmith had to cancel their first concert in Maui, which resulted in a class
action lawsuit involving 8,000 plaintiffs. Attendees received tickets and, in
some cases, reimbursements for out of pocket expenses. The band also performed
in early November at an auto race in Abu Dhabi.
On November 9, 2009, it was
reported that Steven Tyler had no contact with the other members of Aerosmith
and that they were unsure if he was still in the band. On November 10, 2009,
Joe Perry confirmed that Steven Tyler had quit Aerosmith to pursue a solo
career and was unsure whether the move was indefinite. No replacement was
announced. Despite rumors of leaving the band, and notwithstanding Perry's
comment as reported earlier the same day, Tyler joined The Joe Perry Project
onstage November 10, 2009, at the Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza and
performed "Walk This Way." According to sources at the event, Tyler
assured the crowd that despite rumors to the contrary, he is "not quitting
Aerosmith." On December 22, 2009, Rolling Stone reported
that Tyler had checked into rehab for pain management.
In 2010, Steven Tyler
embarked on the Cocked, Locked, Ready to Rock Tour with Aerosmith, which saw
them perform over 40 concerts in 18 countries. On September 16, 2010, it was
reported that Tyler would have his first solo project. He wrote "Love
Lives", which serves as a theme song for the Japanese sci-fi movie Space
Battleship Yamato. The song was based on the English translated script, as
well as on some clips of the film itself. The single was released on November
24, a week before the movie was released. A preview of the single can be heard
in the movie's trailers. On September 22, 2010, Fox confirmed that Tyler would
join American Idol as a member of the judging panel for the program's
tenth season, alongside Randy Jackson and Jennifer Lopez. It has been stated
that former Idol judge Kara DioGuardi helped Tyler get his judging position on
the show. In December 2010, Tyler performed at the Kennedy Center Honors,
honoring Paul McCartney by performing several tracks from Abbey Road.
On January 19, 2011, Tyler
made his debut appearance as a judge on American Idol, during the premiere
of the show's tenth season, which aired through the end of May. On April 2,
2011, Tyler presented an award at the 2011 Kids' Choice Awards. The following
day, Steven Tyler performed with Carrie Underwood at the Academy of Country
Music Awards. Underwood and Tyler performed Underwood's song "Undo It"
and completed their segment with an energetic version of the Aerosmith classic
"Walk This Way". On May 3, 2011, Tyler released his autobiography Does
the Noise in My Head Bother You?, which reached number two on The New
York Times Best Seller List in the category "Hardcover
Non-fiction". The book was accompanied by the new single "(It) Feels
So Good", released May 10. The single reached #35 on the Billboard Hot
100. In addition, during breaks in between Idol, Tyler worked on new
material for Aerosmith's next studio album. Tyler performed the Aerosmith song "Dream
On" on the season finale of American Idol on May 25.
Throughout the summer of
2011, Tyler worked with the other members of Aerosmith on the band's next
studio album, scheduled for release in the spring of 2012. In September 2011,
Tyler starred as the inspiration for Andy Hilfiger's fashion line, "Andrew
Charles". In addition to serving as the inspiration for all menswear,
Steven and his daughter, Chelsea, will appear in the line's advertising
campaign. Tyler also developed a signature scarf collection called "Rock
Scarf" for Andrew Charles. Both the Andrew Charles collection and the Rock
Scarf line are available exclusively in select Macy's stores and on macys.com.
On October 22, 2011, Tyler
set off for an 18-date Aerosmith tour across Latin America and Japan. On
October 25, it was reported by TMZ that Tyler slipped in his hotel shower in
Paraguay and injured his face, including losing several teeth. Tyler was rushed
to the hospital, and the scheduled show was postponed for the following night.
When he did finally perform after the opening song, he proudly displayed his
broken tooth which he had on a string around his neck. He then removed his sunglasses
to reveal a nasty black eye. The tour wrapped up on December 10 in Sapporo,
Japan.
On January 22, 2012, Tyler
sang the National Anthem at the AFC Championship Game. On March 11, 2012, a
special about Aerosmith aired on 60 Minutes, where some of the comments
made by the band members highlighted the still-contentious relationships in the
band. On March 22, however, these tensions seemed to evaporate when guitarist
Joe Perry surprised Tyler with a performance of "Happy Birthday" on American
Idol in advance of Tyler's 64th birthday. On March 26, 2012, Aerosmith
announced their "Global Warming Tour" with dates in many major North
American cities from June 16 to August 8, preceded by a performance on May 30
for Walmart shareholders. In April, a Burger King television commercial
featuring Tyler debuted. Aerosmith's new album, Music from Another
Dimension! was set for release on November 6, 2012 and the band debuted
their new single "Legendary Child" with a performance of the song on
the season finale of American Idol on May 23.
On July 12, 2012, Tyler
announced that he would be leaving American Idol after two seasons, with
a statement saying, "After some long ... hard ...
thoughts ... I've decided it’s time for me to let go of my mistress
'American Idol' before she boils my rabbit. I strayed from my first love,
AEROSMITH, and I’m back — but instead of begging on my hands and knees, I
got two fists in the air and I’m kicking the door open with my band. The next
few years are going to be dedicated to kicking some serious ass — the
ultimate in auditory takeover ..." However the reports suggest that
Tyler was dumped by the American Idol Bosses. Tyler has since indicated
that his troubles with his bandmates were the primary reason he signed up to do
American Idol.
On August 12, Aerosmith
wrapped up the first leg of their Global Warming Tour with a rescheduled
performance in Bristow, Virginia and on August 28, the band released two
singles simultaneously, the rocker "Lover Alot" and the ballad "What
Could Have Been Love", both of which were co-produced and co-written by
Tyler. On September 22, Aerosmith performed at the iHeartRadio music festival
in Las Vegas. On November 6, the new Aerosmith album Music from Another
Dimension! was released, and on November 8, the band began the second leg
of their Global Warming Tour, which took the band to 14 North American cities
through December 13.
On January 21, 2013,
Aerosmith released "Can't Stop Lovin' You" (featuring Carrie
Underwood) as the fourth single from Music from Another Dimension!. The
song features Tyler in a vocal duet with Underwood.
Tyler briefly returned to American
Idol in season 12 auditioning dressed up as a woman named
"Pepper" in front of the judges Randy Jackson, Nicki Minaj, Keith
Urban and Mariah Carey. Tyler visited the American Idol judges when they
were auditioning contestants in November 2012 in Oklahoma City while Tyler also
happened to be in town for a concert on Aerosmith's Global Warming Tour. The
episode aired on January 31, 2013.
On February 20, it was
announced that Tyler and his songwriting partner Joe Perry would be recipients
of the ASCAP Founders Award at the society's 30th Annual Pop Music Awards on
April 17. Two days later, it was announced that the duo would be inducted into
the Songwriters Hall of Fame at a ceremony to be held on June 13.
Dirico
Motorcycles (Red Wing Motorcycles)
On September 15, 2007, at New
Hampshire International Speedway, Steven announced the launch of Dirico
Motorcycles. Dirico's bikes are designed by Steven Tyler, engineered by Mark
Dirico, and built by AC Custom Motorcycles in Manchester, New Hampshire.
Steven has been a long time
motorcycle fan and riding enthusiast. About the new Dirico Motorcycles, Tyler
said, “You get on one of these bikes and you can ride for days. These bikes are
slick, rugged, and just damn cool. And they’re amazing to look at.”
Steven Tyler also
participates in a variety of charity auctions involving motorcycles, including
the Ride for Children charity.
Steven is also friends with
Paul Teutul from American Chopper fame
Politics
In the early months of 2013,
an act was forwarded into Hawaii legislature entitled the Steven Tyler Act
(Hawaii Senate Bill 465). The Act would give more privacy to public figures
such as government officials and celebrities on vacation. Mick Fleetwood (Fleetwood
Mac), Tommy Lee (Mötley Crüe), Margaret Cho, Britney Spears, Avril Lavigne, Neil
Diamond, Sharon Osbourne, and Ozzy Osbourne (Black Sabbath) have all lobbied
for it. The act will give public figures the right to sue paparazzi for taking
unwanted photographs. The bill's sponsor is J. Kalani English of Maui. The bill
was cleared through the Judiciary Committee on Friday, February 8, 2013. Two
thirds of the senate are in favor of the bill, while the other third say it
will limit constitutional rights.
Personal
life
Julia
Holcomb
In 1975, Tyler persuaded the
parents of 16 year old groupie Julia Holcomb (sometimes spelled Holcolm) to
sign over guardianship to him so that he could live with her in Boston. They
dated and did drugs together for three years. Holcomb was referred to as "Diana Hall" by
the editor of the Aerosmith autobiography Walk This Way in an attempt to
conceal her identity, but other sources have confirmed her identity. Pressures
leading to their split included both their age difference (Tyler was 27 when
they first met), a house fire, and a pregnancy that resulted in an abortion.
Band member Ray Tabano wrote in Walk This Way that the abortion
"really messed Steven up" because the child was a boy. Tyler wrote,
"It was a big crisis. It's a major thing when you're growing something
with a woman, but they convinced us that it would never work out and would ruin
our lives. You go to the doctor and they put the needle in her belly and they
squeeze the stuff in and you watch. And it comes out dead. I was pretty
devastated. In my mind, I'm going, Jesus, what have I done?" However,
Julia Holcomb has said that Tyler was snorting cocaine while watching the
abortion and offered some to her. Julia Holcomb — after 36 years of
silence about her relationship with Tyler — has recently revealed her
regret for having the abortion, has joined the Silent No More organization of
women who have regretted their abortions, and has converted to Catholicism.
Family and
relationships
Tyler had a brief
relationship with fashion model Bebe Buell, during which he fathered actress Liv
Tyler, born in 1977. Buell initially claimed that the father was Todd Rundgren
to protect her daughter from Tyler's drug addiction. Through Liv's marriage to
British musician Royston Langdon, Tyler has one grandson, Milo William Langdon
(born December 14, 2004, in New York City).
In 1978, he married Cyrinda
Foxe, an ex-Warhol model, and the former wife of New York Dolls' lead singer David
Johansen, and fathered model Mia Tyler. He and Foxe divorced in 1987; in 1997,
she published Dream On: Livin' on the Edge With Steven Tyler and Aerosmith,
a memoir of her life with Tyler. Foxe died from brain cancer in 2002.
On May 28, 1988, in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
Tyler married his second wife, clothing designer Teresa Barrick. With Barrick,
he fathered a daughter, Chelsea Anna Tallarico (born March 6, 1989), and a son,
Taj Monroe Tallarico (born January 31, 1991). In February 2005, the couple
announced that they were separating due to personal problems. In January 2006
the divorce was official.
Tyler had been in a
relationship with Erin Brady since 2006. He become engaged to Brady in December
2011. In January of 2013 Tyler and Brady broke off their engagement to be
married.
Throat
surgery
On March 22, 2006, the Washington
Post reported that Tyler would undergo surgery for an "undisclosed
medical condition". A statement from Tyler's publicist read in part,
"Despite Aerosmith's desire to keep the tour going as long as possible,
[Tyler's] doctors advised him not to continue performing to give his voice time
to recover”. Aerosmith's remaining North American tour dates in 2006 on the Rockin'
the Joint Tour were subsequently canceled.
The surgery, to correct a
ruptured blood vessel in his throat, was a success. In the words of Tyler:
"He just took a laser and zapped the blood vessel.". After
a few weeks of rest, Tyler and the rest of Aerosmith entered the studio on May
20, 2006 to begin work on their new album.
Tyler's first public
performance since the surgery was on July 3–4, 2006, with Joe Perry in Boston,
at the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade along the Charles River with the Boston
Pops Orchestra. The duo sang "Dream On", "Walk This Way",
and "I Don't Want To Miss A Thing" as part of the Boston Pops July 4
Fireworks Spectacular.
Steven Tyler's throat
surgery was featured in 2007 on an episode of the National Geographic Channel
series, Incredible Human Machine.
Hepatitis C
In a September 2006
interview with Access Hollywood, Steven Tyler revealed that he had been
suffering from Hepatitis C for the past 11 years. He was diagnosed with the
disease in 2003 and had undergone extensive treatment from 2003–2006, including
11 months of interferon therapy, which he said was "agony". Tyler
most likely was infected with Hepatitis C because of his intravenous drug use.
The disease is spread through blood-to-blood contact, and is most often
associated with used needles.
Ldcuongvs –
famous rockers blog
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