Founding member and lead guitarist of American rock band Aerosmith details his life and times in this autobiography.
One of rock’s most enduring and popular bands, Aerosmith has managed the unlikely feat of recording top hits across several decades, gaining a loyal army of fans while failing to win over the acclaim of music critics. Readers of rock autobiographies will find much familiar material here, as early struggles give way to staggering success and the accompanying roller coaster of sex, drugs, rehab, internal band squabbling, villainous management and more. This is well-trod but mostly entertaining ground, and Perry—with the assistance of veteran music writer and ghostwriter Ritz (co-author: Glow: The Autobiography of Rick James, 2014, etc.)—does a decent job keeping things moving. Aerosmith has never been accused of being an intellectual band, but the author takes pains to establish himself as a thoughtful, well-read individual with a love for nature established as a youth wandering in the New Hampshire woods. But his desire to be taken seriously leaves the narrative strangely free of humor; it doesn’t seem like compiling this book was an enjoyable task for Perry. Of the group’s other members, lead singer Steven Tyler is the only fully developed character, and Perry doesn’t hold back in airing his (many) grievances about their relationship. The memories become a little bit sharper once Perry gets sober, and the tale of the band’s entanglement with manager Tim Collins, who seemed to exhibit a cult leader–like control over the group, is perhaps the most interesting part of the book. An appendix written by Perry’s guitar techs is a bonus for guitar geeks.
Much like Aerosmith’s career, this candid memoir will be cheered by fans, but rock critics will likely be underwhelmed.