TIL Steven Tyler did so many drugs that he forgot that he recorded certain songs. Upon hearing "Toys in the Attic", he said “Hey! That’s great! We should cover this. Who is it?” Joe Perry responded, "It's us, fuckhead."

Authored by snopes.com and submitted by 420gulliver
image for TIL Steven Tyler did so many drugs that he forgot that he recorded certain songs. Upon hearing "Toys in the Attic", he said “Hey! That’s great! We should cover this. Who is it?” Joe Perry responded, "It's us, fuckhead."

Aerosmith once decided to play their set list in reverse, then opened a concert with their encore and mistakenly walked off the stage.

The pop music concert industry has come a long way since the mid-1960s, when groups like the Beatles would undertake tours during which they played for less than half an hour, performing the same rigid set list of a dozen recent songs at each stop. Now concert tours are much more elaborately staged productions, with established artists sometimes playing for upwards of two or three hours and performing music drawn from the breadth of recording careers that have spanned multiple decades. And although some artists stick with relatively unvarying set lists throughout their tours, others have taken a variety of approaches towards mixing things up: shuffling different songs in and out of their list every few shows, offering a completely different set list at every stop, or resorting to gimmicks such as playing only audience requests, inviting fans to vote on what music they should perform, or even selecting songs completely at random.

A legend which plays on the subject of set lists holds that during one of their shows in the 1970s, Aerosmith, for reasons unknown (one assumes the influence of recreational substances), decided to shake things up by playing their set in reverse, beginning with the encore and ending with the opening number. However, after getting on stage and running through the first song (i.e., the encore), the group, for reasons unknown (one assumes the influence of recreational substances), thought their set was over and walked off stage after having performed only a single tune:

There’s a famous story about Aerosmith playing a gig in the ’70s when they came on stage, having decided to reverse their set list. They played their encore song first and, then, assuming they’d done the entire show, walked off the stage. Any truth in it?

As amusing (and perhaps believable, among some quarters) as this tale might be, according to Aerosmith lead guitarist Joe Perry there’s nothing to it:

It’s a great story, and it never goes away. Unfortunately, it’s not true. We’ve done some dumb things onstage, but nothing as dumb as that. Having said that, there was one occasion when we played the same song twice [in the same show] because we’d forgotten we’d already played it. That might seem funny to some people, but we’re not proud of it. It was that kind of sh*t that stopped people from coming to our shows.

However, an anecdote attributed to Tim Collins, who managed Aerosmith from 1984-1996, held that the band’s lead singer, Steven Tyler, once failed to recognize one of the group’s older songs when it was played back to him:

95teetee on June 27th, 2017 at 02:40 UTC »

I remember hearing a similar story told by Joe Walsh on Casey Kasem's show. He was talking about the Richard Marx song "Don't Mean Nothin'". He said "I heard this song on the radio and I thought the guitar player was copying me. I phoned my agent and I'm like "Hey man, this dude's copping my style!"

And he said "...that's you, Joe."

RainbowMax on June 27th, 2017 at 02:29 UTC »

I once (somehow) got in a conversation about Steve Tyler with a guy who was purchasing an item I had for sale on Craigslist. We were going on about how nuts he is and the guy said, "that dude is so weird, if you put his brain inside a frogs head it would start jumping backwards." Shit cracked me up.

Congressive on June 27th, 2017 at 02:07 UTC »

The song in question is in fact "You See Me Crying", not the title track of Toys In the Attic, which is a far more memorable song and I'd be fuckin' impressed if Tyler forgot that one. "You See Me Crying" is the last song on side two, and almost nobody ever made it further than "Sweet Emotion". In some ways, it's understandable that Tyler spaced the jam.