|
NEWS : STORIES
LOS ANGELES — The 39-year history of
"Um, well ... I don't know," he shrugged, admitting that the future of Aerosmith is in doubt. "You guys know more about it than I do. Everything is through the press." Everything has been through the press lately, from details about Tyler's desire to go solo to Perry's belief that the lead singer was quitting the band to Tyler's surprise appearance onstage recently with the Joe Perry Project. At that show, Tyler told the crowd that he wasn't leaving Aerosmith. "Well," Perry explained, "he says he's not." As proof of just how bizarre things have become between the legendary Toxic Twins, the duo address each other only through the media these days — or onstage, they essentially speak only to the crowd. "Actually, he sat in. For one song," Perry said of that appearance with the Project. "Yeah, but we didn't talk or anything." Getting beyond Tyler, Joe Perry insisted that the rest of the band — Brad Whitford, Tom Hamilton and Joey Kramer — want to keep the train a-rolling. "I think that you just have to listen to what's going on in the press. Because that's the only thing I know," he explained. "All I know is that the four guys want to work. I'm working with my band, playing the House of Blues all across the country. And we're rocking out and having a good time." "The band's going to be working," he said of Aerosmith's plans, with or without Tyler. "I'm working, right now." But, when it comes to his bandmate of 39 years — with whom he became sober, shares more than 80 songwriting credits and even once owned a restaurant — Joe Perry answered in no uncertain terms when asked if they're speaking to each other. "No," he said of their non-communicative status, repeating it a second time for emphasis: "No." This report is provided by MTV News
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||