Music review: Steven Tyler – ‘We’re All Somebody from Somewhere’
I’m an old-school Aerosmith fan going back to the days when the Boston rockers consecutively reeled off the gritty rock albums “Get Your Wings,” “Toys in the Attic” and “Rocks” during the mid-1970s.
Oh, how times have changed.
Steven Tyler has replaced Boston with Nashville and rock ‘n’ roll for a little taste of modern country. I guess maybe we should have seen this coming after AerosmithĢƵ 2012 album “Music from Another Dimension!” featured a duet with Carrie Underwood on “Can’t Stop Lovin’ You.”
“We’re All Somebody from Somewhere” is TylerĢƵ solo debut that features 15 tracks blending elements of rock and blues with touches of mandolin, fiddle and steel guitar. “My Own Worst Enemy” is a regret-filled breakup track perfectly suited to kick off TylerĢƵ new musical stylings as he manages to mention Jesus, mama and whiskey all in the first few lines.
“Red, White and You” is a rousing summer anthem that references Tom Petty and plays well to country radio and live performances. The title track offers a bit of a funky vibe as Tyler professes his love of cornbread and celebrates AmericaĢƵ diversity and charm singing, “Sweet Biloxi to New York City/From that fine red wine off a vine to cheap brown whiskey/Seattle coffee, Memphis blues/Chi-Town wind, Miami cruise/ThereĢƵ a thousand stories between me and you/Give me some love.”
The albumĢƵ lead single, “Love Is Your Name,” was penned for Tyler by Nashville writers Eric Paslay and Lindsey Lee and begins the first of several well-crafted ballads that comfortably ease Tyler into pure country mode. “The Good, the Bad, the Ugly and Me” is a rocker that fits the Aerosmith mold with Tyler loosening up and letting go.
Not to mention the fact that itĢƵ a great title for a county tune. The album closes with an unexpected and spirited cover of Janis JoplinĢƵ “Piece of My Heart.” Surprisingly, the only missteps include the distorted jumble of “Hold On (Won’t Let Go)” and a reworked version of the Aerosmith track “JanieĢƵ Got a Gun” minus the emotion and aggressive energy of the original.
With Tyler hitting the road to support his new album, it just might be the perfect launching point for the charismatic frontman to shed his rocker roots for a more permanent gig in country music. Hey, it worked out okay for Darius Rucker.
Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard.com.