Aerosmith is an American hard rock band, sometimes referred to  as "The Bad Boys from Boston" and "America's Greatest Rock and Roll  Band". Their style, which is rooted in blues-based hard rock, has come  to also incorporate elements of pop, heavy metal, and rhythm and blues,,  and has inspired many subsequent rock artists.. The band was formed in  Boston, Massachusetts in 1969. Guitarist Joe Perry and bassist Tom  Hamilton, originally in a band together called the Jam Band, met up with  singer Steven Tyler, drummer Joey Kramer, and guitarist Ray Tabano, and  formed Aerosmith. By 1971, Tabano was replaced by Brad Whitford, and  the band began developing a following in Boston.
They were  signed to Columbia Records in 1972, and released a string of  multi-platinum albums, beginning with their 1973 eponymous debut album.  In 1975, the band broke into the mainstream with the album Toys in the Attic, and their 1976 follow-up Rocks  cemented their status as hard rock superstars. By the end of the 1970s,  they were among the most popular hard rock bands in the world and  developed a loyal following of fans, often referred to as the "Blue  Army". However, drug addiction and internal conflict took their toll on  the band, which resulted in the departures of Perry and Whitford, in  1979 and 1981 respectively. They were replaced by Jimmy Crespo and Rick  Dufay. The band did not fare well between 1980 and 1984, releasing a  lone album, Rock in a Hard Place, which went gold but failed to match their previous successes.
Although  Perry and Whitford returned in 1984 and the band signed a new deal with  Geffen Records, it wasn't until the band sobered up and released 1987's  Permanent Vacation that they regained the level of popularity  they had experienced in the 1970s. Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s,  the band scored several hits and won numerous awards for music from the  multi-platinum albums Pump (1989), Get a Grip (1993), and Nine Lives  (1997). Their comeback has been described as one of the most remarkable  and spectacular in rock 'n' roll history. After 39 years of performing,  the band continues to tour and record music.
Aerosmith is the  best-selling American hard rock band of all time, having sold 150  million albums worldwide, including 66.5 million albums in the United  States alone. They also hold the record for the most gold and  multi-platinum albums by an American group. The band has scored 21 Top  40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, nine #1 Mainstream Rock hits,  four Grammy Awards, and ten MTV Video Music Awards. They were inducted  into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001, and in 2005 they were  ranked #57 in Rolling Stone magazine's 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.
History
Formation (1969?1971)
The  origins of Aerosmith can be traced to the late 1960s in Sunapee, New  Hampshire. Steven Tyler was a drummer and vocalist originally from  Yonkers, New York, who had been in a series of relatively unsuccessful  bands such as The Vic Tallarico Orchestra, The Strangeurs/Chain  Reaction, The Chain, Fox Chase, and William Proud. In 1969, while  vacationing in Sunapee, he met Joe Perry, who was at the time washing  dishes at the Anchorage in Sunapee Harbor, and playing in a band called  the Jam Band with bassist Tom Hamilton and drummer David "Pudge" Scott.  This meeting would eventually lead to the formation of Aerosmith.
Hamilton  and Perry moved to Boston, Massachusetts in September. There they met  Joey Kramer, a drummer also from Yonkers, New York who had also known  Steven Tyler, with whom he had always hoped to play in a band. Kramer, a  Berklee College of Music student, decided to quit school to join the  band. In October 1970, they met up once again with Steven Tyler, who had  been a drummer and backup singer, but adamantly refused to play drums  in this band, insisting he would only take part if he could be the  frontman and lead vocalist. The others agreed, and Aerosmith was born.  The band took the name Aerosmith, suggested by drummer Joey Kramer,  after considering The Hookers and Spike Jones. Aerosmith played their  first gig in Mendon, Massachusetts at Nipmuc Regional High School in  1970.
As said, the members of the band used to sit around every afternoon getting stoned and watching Three Stooges reruns. One day, they had a post-Stooges  meeting to try to come up with a name. Kramer volunteered that when he  was in school he would write the word Aerosmith all over his notebooks.  The name had popped into his head after listening to Harry Nilsson?s  album Aerial Ballet, an homage to Nilsson?s grandparents? aerial  circus act, that featured jacket art of a circus performer jumping out  of a biplane. Initially, Kramer?s bandmates were nonplussed; they all  thought he was referring to the boring Sinclair Lewis novel they were  forced to read in high school English class. ?No, not Arrowsmith,?  Kramer explained. ?A-E-R-O...Aerosmith.? 
The band added Ray  Tabano, a childhood friend of Tyler, as rhythm guitarist and began  playing local shows. In 1971, Tabano was replaced by Brad Whitford, who  also attended the Berklee School of Music and was formerly of the band  Earth Inc. Brad Whitford being from Reading, Massachusetts had played at  Reading's AW Coolidge Middle School. Other than a period from July 1979  to April 1984, the line-up of Tyler, Perry, Hamilton, Kramer, and  Whitford has stayed the same.
Record deal, Aerosmith, Get Your Wings, and Toys in the Attic (1971?1975)
"Dream On"
Sample of "Dream On" by Aerosmith, from Aerosmith (1973)
"Sweet Emotion"
Sample of "Sweet Emotion" by Aerosmith, from Toys in the Attic (1975)
After  forming the band and finalizing the lineup in 1971, the band started to  garner some local success doing live shows. Originally booked through  the Ed Malhoit Agency, the band signed a promotion deal with Frank  Connelly and eventually secured a management deal with David Krebs and  Steve Leber in 1972. Krebs and Leber invited Columbia Records President  Clive Davis to see the band at Max's Kansas City club in New York City.  Aerosmith was not originally scheduled to play that night at Max's  Kansas City, but they were able to pay their way on the bill. Aerosmith  signed for a reported $125,000 and issued their debut album, Aerosmith.  Released in January 1973, the album peaked at #166. The album was  straightforward rock and roll with well-defined blues influences, laying  the groundwork for Aerosmith's signature blues-rock sound. Although the  highest charting single from the album was "Dream On" at #59, several  tracks (such as "Mama Kin" and "Walkin' the Dog") would become staples  of the band's live shows and receive airplay on rock radio. The album  reached gold status initially, but eventually went on to sell two  million copies and was certified double platinum after the band reached  mainstream success over a decade later. After constant touring, the band  released their second album Get Your Wings in 1974, the first of  a string of multi-platinum albums produced by Jack Douglas. This album  included the rock radio hits "Same Old Song and Dance" and "Train Kept  A-Rollin'", a cover done previously by The Yardbirds. The album also  contained several fan favorites including "Lord of the Thighs", "Seasons  of Wither", and "S.O.S. (Too Bad)", darker songs which have become  staples in the band's live shows. To date, Get Your Wings has sold three million copies.
It was 1975's Toys in the Attic,  however, that established Aerosmith as international stars competing  with the likes of Led Zeppelin and The Rolling Stones. Originally  derided as Rolling Stones knockoffs, Toys in the Attic showed that Aerosmith was a unique and talented band in their own right. Toys in the Attic  was an immediate success, starting with the single "Sweet Emotion",  which became the band's first Top 40 hit. This was followed by a  successful re-release of "Dream On" which hit #6, becoming their best  charting single of the 1970s. "Walk This Way", re-released in 1976,  reached the Top 10 in early 1977.
In addition, "Toys in the  Attic" and "Big Ten Inch Record" (a song originally recorded by Bull  Moose Jackson) became concert staples. As a result of this success, both  of the band's previous albums re-charted. Toys in the Attic has  gone on to become the band's bestselling studio album in the States,  with certified U.S. sales of eight million copies. The band toured in  support of Toys in the Attic, where they started to get more  recognition. Also around this time, the band established their home base  as "The Wherehouse" in Waltham, Massachusetts, where they would record  and rehearse music, as well as conduct business.
Rocks, Draw the Line, and Live! Bootleg (1976?1978)
Steven Tyler and Joe Perry performing in concert.
Aerosmith's next album was 1976's Rocks,  which "captured Aerosmith at their most raw and rocking". It went  platinum swiftly and featured two FM hits, "Last Child" and "Back in the  Saddle", as well as the ballad "Home Tonight", which also charted. Rocks has sold four million copies to date. Both Toys in the Attic and Rocks  are highly regarded, especially in the hard rock genre, and appear on  such lists as Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, and are  cited by members of Guns N' Roses, Metallica, and M?tley Cr?e as having  large influences on their music. Soon after Rocks was released,  the band continued to tour heavily, this time headlining their own shows  and playing to several large stadiums and rock festivals.
The next album, 1977's Draw the Line,  was not as successful or as critically acclaimed as their two previous  efforts, although the title track proved to be a minor hit (and is still  a live staple), and "Kings and Queens" also experienced some success.  The album went on to sell 2 million copies; however drug abuse and the  fast-paced life of touring and recording began affecting their output.  While continuing to tour and record into the late 1970s, Aerosmith acted  in the movie version of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.  Their cover of the Beatles hit "Come Together" was included in the  album's soundtrack and would be the band's last Top 40 hit for nearly 10  years. The live release Live! Bootleg, originally released as a  double album, was put out in 1978 and captured the band's rawness during  the heyday of the Draw the Line tour. Lead singer Steven Tyler and lead  guitarist Joe Perry became known as "The Toxic Twins" because of their  notorious abuse of drugs on and off the stage.
Departures of Perry and Whitford, Night in the Ruts, and Rock in a Hard Place (1979?1984)
Just after the recording of their sixth studio album, 1979's Night in the Ruts,  Joe Perry left the band, needing to pay off room service bills, and  formed The Joe Perry Project. to get money to pay off those bills. Perry  was replaced first by longtime band friend and songwriter Richard Supa  and then by guitarist Jimmy Crespo (formerly of the band Flame). Night in the Ruts  quickly fell off the charts (although it would eventually go platinum  several years later), its only single being a cover of The Shangri-Las'  "Remember (Walking in the Sand)", which topped out at #67.
The band continued to tour in support of Night in the Ruts  with new guitarist Jimmy Crespo onboard, but as the 1970s came to a  close, the band's popularity waned. Steven Tyler collapsed onstage  during a performance in Portland, Maine in early 1980. Also in 1980,  Aerosmith released its Greatest Hits album. The album has gone on  to become the band's bestselling album in the United States, with sales  of 11 million copies. In the fall of 1980, Tyler was injured in a  serious motorcycle accident, which left him hospitalized for two months,  and unable to tour or record well into 1981. In 1981, the band suffered  another loss with the departure of Brad Whitford. After recording  guitar parts for the song "Lightning Strikes", Whitford was replaced by  Rick Dufay and the band recorded their seventh album Rock in a Hard Place  in 1982. The album was considered a commercial failure, only going  gold, and failing to produce a major hit single. During the tour for Rock in a Hard Place,  Tyler again collapsed on stage, this time at the band's homecoming show  in Worcester, Massachusetts, after getting high with Joe Perry, who met  with Aerosmith backstage that evening.
On February 14, 1984,  Perry and Whitford saw Aerosmith perform. They were officially  re-inducted into the ranks of Aerosmith once more two months later.  Steven Tyler recalls:
?
You should have felt the buzz the moment all five of us got together in the same room for the first time again. We all started laughin'?it was like the five years had never passed. We knew we'd made the right move.
?
?Steven Tyler, 
Back in the Saddle reunion tour, Done with Mirrors, and drug rehab (1984?1986)
In 1984, Aerosmith embarked on a reunion tour entitled "Back in the Saddle", which led to the live album Classics Live II.  While concerts on the tour were well-attended, it was plagued with  several incidents, mostly attributed to drug abuse by band members.  Their problems still not behind them, the group was signed to Geffen  Records and began working on a comeback. Despite the band signing on to a  new record company, Columbia continued to reap the benefits of  Aerosmith's comeback, releasing the live companion albums Classics Live I and II and the collection Gems.
In 1985 the band released the album Done with Mirrors,  their first studio album with Geffen and their first album since the  much-publicized reunion. While the album did receive some positive  reviews, it only went gold and failed to produce a hit single, or  generate much buzz outside the confines of rock radio. The album's most  notable track, "Let the Music Do the Talking", was in fact a cover of a  song originally recorded by The Joe Perry Project and released on that  band's album of the same name. Nevertheless, the band became a popular  concert attraction once again, touring in support of Done With Mirrors,  well into 1986. In 1986, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry appeared on Run  D.M.C.'s cover of Aerosmith's "Walk This Way", a track blending rock and  roll and hip hop that not only cemented rap into the mainstream of  American popular music, but also marked Aerosmith's true comeback. The  song reached #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 and its associated video helped introduce Aerosmith to a new generation.
Yet  the band members' drug problems still stood in their way. In 1986, lead  singer Steven Tyler completed a successful drug rehabilitation program,  at the discretion of his fellow band members and manager Tim Collins,  who believed that the band's future would not be bright if Tyler did not  get treated. The rest of the band members also completed drug rehab  programs over the course of the next couple of years. According to the  band's tell-all autobiography, Collins pledged he could make Aerosmith  the biggest band in the world by 1990 if they all completed drug rehab.  Their next album was crucial because of the commercial disappointment of  Done With Mirrors, and as the band members became clean, they worked hard to make their next album a success.
Permanent Vacation and Pump (1987?1991)
Permanent Vacation  was released in September 1987, becoming a major hit and the band's  bestselling album in over a decade (selling 5 million copies in the  U.S.), with all three of its singles ("Dude (Looks Like a Lady)", "Rag  Doll", and "Angel") reaching the Top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100.  The group went on a subsequent tour with labelmates Guns N' Roses (who  have cited Aerosmith as a major influence), which was intense at times  because of Aerosmith's new struggle to stay clean amidst GN'Rs  well-publicized, rampant drug use.
"Janie's Got a Gun"
Sample of "Janie's Got a Gun" by Aerosmith, from Pump (1989)
Aerosmith's next album was even more successful. Pump,  released in October 1989, featured three Top Ten singles: "Janie's Got a  Gun", "What It Takes", and "Love in an Elevator", as well as the Top 30  "The Other Side", re-establishing Aerosmith as a serious musical force.  Pump was a critical and commercial success, eventually selling 7  million copies, achieving four-star ratings from major music magazines,  and earning the band their first ever Grammy win in the category of  Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, for "Janie's Got a  Gun". The recording process for Pump was documented in the video The Making of Pump, which has since been re-released as a DVD. The music videos for the album's singles were featured on the release Things That Go Pump in the Night, which quickly went platinum.
Aerosmith appear in a "Wayne's World" sketch on Saturday Night Live in 1990.
In support of Pump,  the band embarked on the 12-month Pump Tour, which lasted for most of  1990. On February 21, 1990, the band appeared in a "Wayne's World"  sketch on Saturday Night Live, debating the fall of communism and  the Soviet Union, and performed their recent hits "Janie's Got a Gun"  and "Monkey on My Back". On August 11, 1990, the band's performance on  MTV's Unplugged aired. In October 1990, the Pump Tour ended, with  the band's first ever performances in Australia. That same year, the  band was also inducted to the Hollywood Rock Walk. In 1991, the band  appeared on The Simpsons episode "Flaming Moe's" and released a box set titled Pandora's Box.  In 1992, Tyler and Perry appeared live as guests of Guns N' Roses  during the latter's 1992 worldwide pay-per-view show in Paris,  performing a medley of "Mama Kin" (which GN'R covered in 1986) and  "Train Kept-A Rollin".
Get a Grip and Big Ones (1992?1995)
The band took a brief break before recording their follow-up to Pump in 1992. Despite significant shifts in mainstream music at the beginning of the 1990s, 1993's Get a Grip  was just as successful commercially, becoming their first album to  debut at #1 and racking up sales of 7 million copies in a  two-and-a-half-year timespan. The first singles were the hard rocking  "Livin' on the Edge" and "Eat the Rich". Though many critics were  unimpressed by the focus on the subsequent interchangeable power-ballads  in promoting the album, all three ("Cryin'", "Crazy" and "Amazing")  proved to be huge successes on radio and MTV. The music videos featured  then up-and-coming actress Alicia Silverstone; her provocative  performances earned her the title of "the Aerosmith chick" for the first  half of the decade. Steven Tyler's daughter Liv Tyler was also featured  in the "Crazy" video. Get a Grip would go on to sell more than 7  million copies in the U.S. alone, and over 15 million copies worldwide.  The band won two Grammy Awards for songs from this album in the  category of Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal: for  "Livin' on the Edge" in 1994 and "Crazy" in 1995.
During the making of Get a Grip,  the management and record company brought in a variety of professional  songwriting collaborators to help give nearly all the songs on the album  more commercial appeal, a trend which would continue until the early  2000s. However, this led to accusations of selling out that would  continue throughout the 90s. In addition to Aerosmith's grueling 18  month world tour in support of Get a Grip, the band also did a  number of things to help promote themselves and their album and appeal  to youth culture, including the appearance of the band in the movie Wayne's World 2 where they performed two songs, the appearance of the band and their music in the video games Revolution X and Quest for Fame, performing at Woodstock '94, using their song "Deuces Are Wild" in The Beavis and Butt-Head Experience,  and opening their own club, The Mama Kin Music Hall, in Boston, MA in  1994. That same year saw the release of the band's compilation for  Geffen Records, entitled Big Ones featuring their biggest hits from Permanent Vacation, Pump, and Get a Grip,  as well as three new songs, "Deuces Are Wild", "Blind Man", and "Walk  on Water", all of which experienced great success on the rock charts.
Nine Lives and "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" (1996?2000)
"I Don't Want to Miss a Thing"
Sample of "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" by Aerosmith, from Armageddon (1998)
Aerosmith  had signed a $30 million contract with Columbia Records/Sony Music in  1991, but had only recorded three of their six contractual albums with  Geffen Records at that point (Done with Mirrors, Permanent Vacation, and Pump). Between 1991 and 1996, they released two more albums with Geffen (Get a Grip and Big Ones),  which meant they now had five albums with Geffen under their belt  (along with a planned live compilation), which meant they could now  begin recording for their new contract with Columbia. The band took time off with their families before working on their next album, Nine Lives,  which was plagued with personnel problems, including the firing of  manager Tim Collins, who, according to band members, had nearly caused  the band to break up. The album's producer was also changed from Glen  Ballard to Kevin Shirley. Nine Lives was released in March 1997. Reviews were mixed, and Nine Lives  initially fell down the charts, although it had a long chart life and  sold double platinum in the United States alone, fueled by its singles,  "Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees)", the ballad "Hole in My Soul",  and the crossover-pop smash "Pink" (which won the band their fourth  Grammy Award in 1999 in the Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with  Vocal category). It was followed by the over two-year-long Nine Lives  Tour, which was plagued by problems including lead singer Steven Tyler  injuring his leg at a concert, and Joey Kramer suffering second degree  burns when his car caught fire at a gas station. However, the band also  released their only #1 single to date: "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing",  the love theme, written by Diane Warren, from the 1998 film Armageddon,  starring Steven Tyler's daughter Liv. The song stayed on top of the  charts for four weeks and was nominated for an Academy Award. The song  helped open Aerosmith up to a new generation and remains a slow-dance  staple. 1998 also saw the release of the double-live album, A Little South of Sanity,  which was assembled from performances on the Get a Grip and Nine Lives  tours. The album went platinum shortly after its release. The band  continued with their seemingly neverending world tours promoting Nine Lives and the "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" single well into 1999.
In  1999, Aerosmith was featured in the Disney Hollywood Studios at Walt  Disney World (and later in 2001 at Disneyland Paris in the Walt Disney  Studios Park) ride, Rock 'n' Roller Coaster Starring Aerosmith,  providing the ride's soundtrack and theme. On September 9, 1999, Steven  Tyler and Joe Perry reunited with Run-D.M.C. and were also joined by Kid  Rock for a collaborative live performance of "Walk This Way" at the MTV  Video Music Awards, a precursor to the Girls of Summer Tour. The band  celebrated the new millennium with a brief tour of Japan, and also  contributed the song "Angel's Eye" to the 2000 film Charlie's Angels.
Just Push Play, O, Yeah!, and Rocksimus Maximus (2001?2003)
The  band entered their next decade by performing at the halftime show for  Super Bowl XXXV, in January 2001, along with pop stars 'N Sync, Britney  Spears, Mary J. Blige, and Nelly. All of the stars collaborated with  Aerosmith at the end for a performance of "Walk This Way".
"Jaded"
Sample of "Jaded" by Aerosmith, from Just Push Play (2001)
In March 2001, the band released their 13th studio album Just Push Play,  which quickly went platinum, fueled by the Top 10 single "Jaded" and  the appearance of the title track in Dodge commercials. They were  inducted to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame soon after their album was  released, in late March 2001. Aerosmith is the only band to be inducted  to the Hall of Fame with a song active in the charts ("Jaded"). Later  that year, the band performed as part of the United We Stand: What More  Can I Give benefit concert in Washington D.C. for 9/11 victims and their  families. The band flew back to Indianapolis for a show the same night,  as part of their Just Push Play Tour.
The band started 2002 by ending the Just Push Play tour, and simultaneously recording segments for their Behind the Music  special on VH1, which not only chronicled the band's history but also  the band's current activities and touring. The special was one of the  few Behind the Musics to run two hours in length. In July 2002, Aerosmith released a two-disc career-spanning compilation O, Yeah! Ultimate Aerosmith Hits,  which featured the new single "Girls of Summer" and embarked on the  Girls of Summer Tour with Kid Rock and Run-D.M.C. opening. O, Yeah!  has since been certified double platinum. MTV honored Aerosmith with  their mtvICON award in 2002. Performances included Pink covering  "Janie's Got a Gun". Shakira performed "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)", Kid  Rock played "Mama Kin" and "Last Child", Train performed "Dream On" and  Papa Roach covered "Sweet Emotion". In addition, testimonials featured  surprise guests Metallica, as well as Janet Jackson, Limp Bizkit singer  Fred Durst, Alicia Silverstone and Mila Kunis. In 2003, Aerosmith  co-headlined with Kiss on the Rocksimus Maximus Tour, in preparation for  release of their blues album. They also performed a song for Rugrats Go  Wild,"Lizard Love".
Honkin' on Bobo, Rockin' the Joint, and Devil's Got a New Disguise (2004?2006)
Brad Whitford, Steven Tyler, and Joe Perry of Aerosmith performing at the NFL Kickoff in Washington, DC on September 4, 2003.
Aerosmith's long-promised blues album Honkin' on Bobo  was released in 2004. This was a return to the band's roots, including  recording the album in live sessions, working with former producer Jack  Douglas, and laying down their blues-rock grit. It was followed by a  live DVD, You Gotta Move, in December 2004, culled from  performances on the Honkin' on Bobo Tour. "Dream On" was also featured  in an advertising campaign for Buick in 2004, targeting that marque's  market which is now composed largely of people who were teenagers when  the song first charted.
2005 saw Steven Tyler appear in the film Be Cool.  Joe Perry released his self-titled solo album that same year. At the  2006 Grammy Awards, he was nominated for Best Rock Instrumental  Performance for the track "Mercy", but lost to Les Paul. In October  2005, Aerosmith released a CD/DVD Rockin' the Joint. The band hit  the road for the Rockin' the Joint Tour on October 30 with Lenny  Kravitz for a fall/winter tour of arenas in the largest U.S. markets.  The band planned to tour with Cheap Trick in the spring, hitting  secondary markets in the U.S. Almost all of this leg of the tour was  canceled, however. Dates were initially canceled one by one until March  22, 2006, when it was announced that lead singer Steven Tyler needed  throat surgery, and the remaining dates on the tour were subsequently  canceled.
Aerosmith commenced recording a new album on Armed  Forces Day 2006. Tyler and Perry performed with the Boston Pops  Orchestra for their annual July 4 concert on the Esplanade in 2006, a  milestone as it was the first major event or performance since Steven  Tyler's throat surgery. Around this time, the band also announced that  they would embark on the Route of All Evil Tour with M?tley Cr?e in late  2006. On August 24, 2006 it was announced that Tom Hamilton was  undergoing treatment for throat cancer. In order to make a full  recovery, he sat out much of the Route of All Evil Tour until he was  well again. Former Joe Perry Project bassist David Hull substituted for  Hamilton until his return. On September 5, 2006, Aerosmith kicked off  the Route of All Evil Tour with M?tley Cr?e in Columbus, Ohio. The  co-headlining tour took both bands to amphitheaters across North America  through November 24. After that, a select few arena dates were added,  some of which were with M?tley Cr?e. The tour ended December 17.
On October 17, 2006, the compilation album Devil's Got a New Disguise - The Very Best of Aerosmith  was released. The album contained previous hits with the addition of  two new songs, "Devil's Got a New Disguise" and "Sedona Sunrise", which  were older outtakes re-recorded for the album. "Devil's Got a New  Disguise" peaked at #15 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The album  was intended to fulfill Aerosmith's contract with Sony and tide fans  over until the band's new studio album was released.
World Tour, Guitar Hero: Aerosmith, and new album (2007 onward)
Aerosmith performing live at Quilmes Rock, Argentina on April 15, 2007.
In  early 2007, the band announced a new World Tour, their first for nearly  a decade to include dates outside North America or Japan. The band  performed at London's Hard Rock Cafe in February 2007 to promote their  European tour which included a night in Hyde Park as part of the Hyde  Park Calling festival sponsored by Hard Rock Cafe. In the spring, the  band toured Latin America to sold-out stadium crowds. In the summer, the  band toured Europe, performing at several major rock festivals and  visiting some countries they had never played before. Additionally, the  band played Asian countries such as the United Arab Emirates and India  for the first time. The band also played a few select dates in  California and Canada in late July. One such date, a July 21 concert in  Prince Edward Island, was the largest in that province's history. In  September, the band performed eight dates in major markets in  Northeastern North America. These shows were opened by Joan Jett. The  band also played a private gig in Hawaii. A public show in Maui was  canceled for logistical reasons, which spurred a class action lawsuit  against the band. In April 2009, Aerosmith agreed to compensate all  ticket buyers of the canceled show with a free ticket to a rescheduled  Maui show to be held in late September, along with reimbursements of all  out-of-pocket expenses related to the show.
On November 1,  2007, the band began work on the final studio album of their current  contract with Sony. It is believed that the album will be a mix of  re-recorded tracks left off previous albums as well as brand new  material. In an interview, guitarist Joe Perry revealed that in addition  to creating a new album, the band was working closely with the makers  of the Guitar Hero series to develop Guitar Hero: Aerosmith,  which is dedicated to the band's music. The game was released on June  29, 2008 and contains many of their most popular songs. Steven Tyler  announced on VH1 Classic Radio on September 4, 2008 that Aerosmith  intends to enter the studio at the end of September 2008 to complete the  band's 15th studio album. It will be the band's first album of original  material since 2001's Just Push Play. Tyler also confirmed that  the band plans to begin a new U.S. tour in June 2009, in support of the  as-yet-untitled album. This tour was supposed to be preceded by a  concert in Venezuela on , 2009. However, on January 15, Tyler said the  band would be unable to play the gig because of a second knee injury of  guitarist Joe Perry. In mid-February 2009, it was announced that the  album would be produced by the famed Brendan O?Brien and that the album  would likely be recorded live, like their earlier records. Although the  band had hoped to finish the album before the tour starts in June 2009,  Perry said that the group "realized there wasn't any chance of getting   finished before we hit the road for the summer." The tour is also slated  to feature ZZ Top as the opening act. The Aerosmith/ZZ Top Tour,  presented by Guitar Hero: Aerosmith, was officially announced and the first dates released on , 2009.
The  tour took the band across North America from June to September 2009.  The tour featured the band perform all of the songs on the band's 1975  album Toys in the Attic during the first seven dates of the tour  and also featured Joe Perry sing lead vocals on the 1976 deep cut  "Combination". The tour was plagued with several health problems  however. Guitarist Brad Whitford had to sit out the first seven dates of  the tour in order to recover from head surgery, after injuring his head  getting out of his car. On June 28, 2009, at the band's seventh show of  the tour at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut, lead  singer Steven Tyler injured his leg, which required the following seven  shows to be postponed. As soon as the band resumed the tour on July 15,  Whitford returned to the fold, however Tom Hamilton had to depart the  tour in order to recover from non-invasive surgery. On August 5, 2009,  Tyler was rushed to the hospital after falling from the stage at a  concert in Sturgis, South Dakota. Tyler toppled off the venue's catwalk  while dancing to entertain fans during a lull in "Love In An Elevator"  when the band's sound equipment suffered an outage. He was helped up by  security staff and taken backstage, before guitarist Joe Perry told the  audience the show was over. Tyler was airlifted to Rapid City Regional  Hospital, where he received treatment for head and neck injuries and a  broken shoulder. In the wake of Tyler's injuries, the band was forced to  postpone five shows in Western Canada. On August 14th, 2009, Aerosmith  announced that they had decided to cancel the rest of their U.S. tour  dates with ZZ Top, due to Tyler's injuries. 
6:39 PM
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