
Aerosmith: Joe Perry's Solo Surge, Tyler's Legal Battle, and Comeback Hopes
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This has been a turbulent yet fascinating week in the Aerosmith universe. The biggest headline comes from Joe Perry, who’s back on the road with the Joe Perry Project for his first major solo dates since Aerosmith’s dramatic 2024 farewell tour news. Kicking off August 13th in Tampa, Perry’s group—featuring Aerosmith’s Brad Whitford and Buck Johnson plus Chris Robinson from The Black Crowes—has been hitting major venues, with Boston’s Wang Theatre hosting them August 19th and an upcoming slot at Boston’s Fenway Park supporting The Who on August 26th, then Hollywood Bowl in September. These shows are drawing attention not just for fan nostalgia but for the lineup itself; Robinson and former Stone Temple Pilots bassist Robert DeLeo are bringing new energy to classic Aerosmith covers, including fiery renditions of Draw the Line as captured in audience videos from the Boston stop on YouTube and Instagram.
Social buzz heated up when the Joe Perry Project’s Foxwoods Casino show on August 22nd was abruptly postponed, according to Joe Perry’s official Instagram, leaving some disappointed New Englanders holding tickets and generating speculation about the cause—though neither health nor logistics have been confirmed, so at this point, any details are pure conjecture. Meanwhile, the band’s social channels leaned into nostalgia mode, celebrating the thirtieth anniversary of that legendary Woodstock ‘94 appearance. Aerosmith’s official Instagram pulled out unseen tour footage and reignited debate among diehard fans about whether that epic set, complete with Steven Tyler’s kimono-and-tophat look, is still the band’s peak live moment. Classic rock outlets like Parade picked it up, generating a wave of “where were you in ’94” stories across fan spaces.
Steven Tyler is making headlines for very different reasons. Billboard reports Tyler is fighting a proposed delay in the high-profile civil trial accusing him of sexual assault in the 1970s. Tyler wants the case, filed by Julia Misley, to stay on the October docket, saying he deserves to clear his name sooner rather than later. His attorneys haven’t denied the underlying relationship described in Misley’s suit but argue it was legal and consensual at the time. The legal filings are bringing fresh scrutiny, as the lawsuit centers on years that Tyler himself described in his memoir, and fans are divided between calls for resolution and discomfort at the details.
Joe Perry, never one to mince words, hinted through Bay Area rock radio that maybe, just maybe, Aerosmith could mount one more final show—not a full tour, but perhaps a residency or special gig, depending on Steven Tyler’s ongoing vocal health. For now, Perry’s keeping hope alive but nothing is confirmed.
So, for Aerosmith, this was a week balancing classic rock nostalgia and present-day turbulence, with Joe Perry’s new music venture, unresolved legal drama for Steven Tyler, and an undercurrent of fan longing for one more Walk This Way.
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