Current:Home > NewsAerosmith is in top form at Peace Out tour kickoff, showcasing hits and brotherhood -Aspire Money Growth
Aerosmith is in top form at Peace Out tour kickoff, showcasing hits and brotherhood
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:36:00
PHILADELPHIA — Fans have been fleeced by faux farewell tours so many times that cynicism is warranted.
But this feels like a grand goodbye for Aerosmith – as least as far as touring, as the caveat goes – and the band is marinating in every serrated guitar riff, every scarf adorning a mic stand, every piercing laser and light.
The Peace Out tour commenced Saturday at Philadelphia’s Wells Fargo Center, the first of 40 dates for Aerosmith that will run through January, with a shiny production that felt intimate in an arena, but big enough that it could have filled a stadium.
The quartet of irrepressible frontman Steven Tyler, virtuoso guitarist Joe Perry, steadfast bassist Tom Hamilton and guitarist Brad Whitford, the main texture man – rose together on a platform at the rear of the open-backed stage, awash in a purple haze to open the nearly two-hour show with, appropriately, “Back in the Saddle.”
A celebration of 50 years of Aerosmith
It took the leonine Tyler, clad in a long silver coat and floppy black hat and looking like your coolest older aunt, about three seconds to sideways-gallop down a ramp to the tip of the stage, which is designed in the shape of a Flying-V guitar.
Perry, a slouchy rock cowboy in his own black hat and billowing white shirt, joined his partner in musical brotherhood moments later for “Love in an Elevator,” an early indication that the show would swing between album cuts for diehard fans and familiar anthems for those who discovered Aerosmith during their MTV dominance.
The tour is, after all, billed as a celebration of Aerosmith’s 50 years of music, from the grimy blues rock and druggy riffs of the ‘70s to the polished sheen of their mainstream-commanding ‘80s output.
'A very lucky man':Sting shares an appreciation of My Songs on current tour
Throughout their spirited set, the band – joined by Seth Stachowski on saxophone, Suzie McNeil on background vocals, Buck Johnson on keyboards and background vocals and John Douglas, filling in on drums this tour for Joey Kramer – sounded taut and aggressive.
Tyler’s holy howl remains remarkably flexible, which he verified on the gravelly choruses of “Cryin’” and the prescient “Livin’ on the Edge,” and the band’s musicianship is in peak form for this victory lap.
A few opening night snafus were moderately noticeable: A missed drum cue for the funky “Rag Doll,” a wayward harmonica during “Hangman Jury” and a visibly frustrated Tyler signaling about sound issues among them.
But rock ‘n’ roll is never supposed to be perfect.
The unspoken sentiments between Steven Tyler and Joe Perry
Aerosmith has also never made a secret of their use of teleprompters and indeed, several were nestled around the stage floor as well as one large screen perched above the sound board.
A lyrical safety net was warranted when the band rolled into “Adam’s Apple,” an album cut from “Toys in the Attic” that they’ve only played live a couple dozen times since the album’s 1975 release.
While little mention was made of the finality of Aerosmith’s touring career, the scope of the songs selected for the set list provided the unspoken sentiments.
Tyler, 75, and Perry, 72 – always and forever The Toxic Twins – sat on a couple of stools at the foot of the stage for a blues tour that included the swampy “Hangman Jury,” filled with slide guitar and harmonica, and the beautifully eerie “Seasons of Wither.”
Their intuitive communication, not to mention the nearly identical white streaks in their respective manes, was palpable with only an elbow nudge or a raised eyebrow needed, an understanding between those with shared molecules.
Joe Perry pays tribute to Jeff Beck
Perry told the sold-out crowd that the white Fender Stratocaster he was playing was from Jeff Beck’s collection, a gift from the late guitarist’s wife. He uncorked blistering blues on “Movin’ Out,” a deep cut from Aerosmith’s self-titled 1973 debut and the first song written by Perry and Tyler in their fledgling partnership.
Five decades later, they and the rest of the band are still pumping out the purring bass line of “Sweet Emotion,” tearing through the sonic blitzkrieg of “Toys in the Attic” and ruminating on aging in the eternally beautiful “Dream On” (yes, Tyler can still climb those notes).
The show closing “Walk This Way” – its zippy guitar riff one of the most iconic in rock history – concluded the night with loose joyfulness. But it might be more apropos to honor Aerosmith’s history with their own words from “Dream On”: “Sing for the laughter, sing for the tear.”
The Black Crowes open for Aerosmith
Opening throughout the Peace Out tour is The Black Crowes, fellow blues rockers with a rangy lead singer (Chris Robinson) and searing guitarist (Rich Robinson). Their six-piece band and two backup singers coaxed fans to their seats early with a solid offering that included “Twice As Hard” – with the Robinson brothers on harmonica and slide guitar – their grinding cover of Otis Redding’s “Hard to Handle” and the blues-boogying “Remedy.”
Though the band sounded robust and record-perfect, Chris Robinson’s vocals were muddied by a poor mix, making the acoustic-based ballad “She Talks to Angels” the only clearly discerned vocal of The Crowes’ hourlong set.
But Aerosmith and The Black Crowes is a well-matched bill, a back-to-back serving of meaty, substantial rock.
Jam sessions: Steve Miller recalls late '60s San Francisco music having 'a dark side' but 'so much beauty'
veryGood! (2237)
Related
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Baby, one more time! Britney Spears' 'Crossroads' movie returns to theaters in October
- 'A deadly predator': 2nd yellow-legged hornet nest, murder hornet's relative, found in GA
- Voting for long-delayed budget begins in North Carolina legislature
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- As mayors, governors scramble to care for more migrants, a look at what’s behind the numbers
- Woman makes 'one in a million' drive-by catch during Texas high school football game
- At least 1 killed when bus carrying high schoolers crashes on way to band camp
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- In chic Soho, a Hindu temple offers itself as a spiritual oasis
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Sophie Turner Says She Found Out Joe Jonas Filed for Divorce From Media
- Former US Sen. Dick Clark, an Iowa Democrat known for helping Vietnam War refugees, has died at 95
- Novels from US, UK, Canada and Ireland are finalists for the Booker Prize for fiction
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- The U.N. plan to improve the world by 2030 is failing. Does that make it a failure?
- 3-year-old dies while crossing Rio Grande
- When is the next Powerball drawing? No winners, jackpot rises over $700 million
Recommendation
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
DuckDuckGo founder says Google’s phone and manufacturing partnerships thwart competition
Governors, Biden administration push to quadruple efficient heating, AC units by 2030
EU calls on Bosnian Serb parliament to reject draft law that brands NGOs as ‘foreign agents’
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
President Biden welcomes Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as some Republicans question aid
Poker player Rob Mercer admits lying about having terminal cancer in bid to get donations
Powerball jackpot climbs to $725 million after no winner drawn Wednesday