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How can I buy cocaine online in Pyha
From the band that lived by the motto 'Anything worth doing was worth overdoing' — Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, Tom Hamilton, Brad Whitford, and Joey Kramer — comes a quarter century of rock godhood: the life, the music, the truth, the hell, the lost years, and the raunchy, unsafe sex. But after crashing in a suffocating cloud of cocaine, crystal meth, and heroin, Aerosmith rose up from the ashes to become clean and sober — and reclaim their rightful title as World Champion Rockers. Learn how they did it in a book that is pure Aerosmith unbound: where they came from, what they are now, and what they will always be — a great American band. Jump to ratings and reviews. Want to read. Buy on Amazon. Rate this book. Aerosmith , Stephen Davis. Hang on, it's a hell of a ride! And, of course, the drugs. Loading interface About the author. Aerosmith 73 books 14 followers. Write a Review. Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book! Community Reviews. Search review text. Displaying 1 - 30 of reviews. Spider the Doof Warrior. I am re-reading this. It's extremely fascinating. Adam Light. Author 20 books followers. I really enjoyed this book. Aerosmith has quite a remarkable story. Suzanne Seddon. Author 1 book followers. Great Book! Worth a read. Shin Tsujimura. Aerosmith, one of the greatest and most recognizable bands of all time reveal their journey as a band as well as personal struggles during their careers as rock stars. An autobiography of the band takes us into depth of unrevealed secrets that have been obscure for decades. One of these secrets would most definitely not be drug abuse. Like many other hard rock bands of the classic rock era, Aerosmith had a reputation for drug and alcohol abuse. I find it incredible that the band is still around today, because many bands have often lost members to drug overdose, suicides, or the sad disbanding of itself. These guys just recently broke up after over 30 years of touring around the world, most of the members breaking the 60 year mark. I just think that this book is a great look in a more personal level of the band, and as a huge Aerosmith fan, I really liked the stories and the book over all. I think this book is a good read for pretty much anyone, because the only reason you would not know of these guys is if you lived under a rock your whole life. The story is worth reading, as it is filled with 30 years of stories and drama, but most of all success. This book blew me away. It isn't just a biography It is amazing that these guys lived through the s. It looks long when you first see it Fantastic stuff. The narrative bounces back and forth between all five band members, as well as their wives, girlfriends, and other people close to them. This gives it the flow and ease of a casual conversation. Matti Karjalainen. Author 6 books 2, followers. If you're like me, you grew up listening to Aerosmith. This memoir is like sitting down with the band and watching their life unfold. It's fantastic, surprisingly down-to-earth and addictive to read. I couldn't put it down. Highly recommend! My Rating: 5 stars. Dameon-Lee Benosn. Amazing book. It is a must read again for me. Jared Woods. Author 9 books 39 followers. On the 26th of June , I saw Aerosmith live for my very first time in Lisbon. To call what happened an 'epiphany' or a 'fundamental shift' would be a touch too dramatic, but some definite root understanding evolved within me. You see, for over 20 years, Aerosmith have been important figures in my life, not in an 'always on my mind' type of way, but truly always in my heart. More often than not, they had me as their sole defender during conversations where others laughed them off as some ancient cheesy stadium rock band, and I just wondered how many of these people could name a song of theirs that wasn't on Armageddon. So when the group announced what was dubbed 'their final tour', I knew I had to go, bought the tickets, packed my bags, and naively went on my way, convinced that I was going to see some old dudes who couldn't dance anymore cashing in on former hits, which was fine by me. But of course, I was not only proven wrong on every concern, but was also emotionally touched as all of my memories soundtracked by their records came seeping back. And that's when I clicked: Aerosmith are one of the most important hard rock bands in all of history. And I haven't stopped thinking about them since. I dedicated every spare second I could to revisiting their albums until I'd re-listened to them all in chronological order. I preached the word of the Blue Army to anyone who was within earshot which means this review is probably only going to work as an annoyance to my friends. But with all of the praise leaking out from my pores, I'm sure you can understand why Walk This Way was my most obvious and logical next read, right? I'd already read Steven Tyler's autobiography anyway. Ok, so the first and most important aspect of this book that you need to know about, is this: if you are not a deeply deeply! It's quite the endurance test with its length. It takes a couple of hundred pages before it really gets going. It has the customary boring introductions of personal stories that only the people telling the stories care about, except this is like an extended version because there's more than one author here. In fact, it's such a collaborative tale and I mean, collaborative in the sense that it includes sections written by managers, promoters, label executives, girlfriends, press, drug dealers etc that you can get quite lost with everyone's names if you don't pay attention. And finally, there are no rocks unturned here, as every single detail imaginable has been included, which I can't envision the casual reader finding much interest in. No, and what's more, I am pleased to announce that I found an even greater respect for the band since closing this cover. Said newly found respect stemmed from the realisation that Aerosmith's success was never handed to them. They didn't get lucky. They weren't best mates having a good time—I'm not even convinced they liked one another whatsoever. Instead, they were pure rockstars before they could even afford rent, on a mission driven blindly by determination, and they earned every bit of fame they got. Furthermore, you must appreciate that we are talking about the best-selling American hard rock band of all time here officially , which comes with such an educated insight into how the industry has changed so drastically over those decades from every perspective the business requires to run, while the band grappled and conquered relevancy throughout on a side note: this book was released in , just after Nine Lives, which was their last great album anyway, so probably for the best. Why such a mass amount of contributors works in its favour, is because the narrative is passed around so rapidly that you get everyone's side of the story, ready to contradict and sell out their partners' recollections on the very next page, whilst always hovering around the common ground that brought them together in the first place: the music. Well, of course, until the drugs came into play, and as we all know, they came into play in a legendary way, slowly gaining momentum, building weight, dipping the scales in their favour, until it completely toppled them over and they had to start again. It was fascinating to read all of this, because their abuse was up there with worst I've read, and it doesn't take long before you understand why their lifestyle was so unsustainable. Aerosmith have always been a well documented cautionary tale, yet I still found myself rooting for them with all my spirit even though I knew the outcome already. But that's not really what this was about either. Rather, this was a step by step guide on everything they did right, and everything they did wrong, with enough funny anecdotes to keep you entertained without ever becoming a joke. If anything, it was a bit too serious or even scary to learn how close they came to dissolution, complete disintegration, and even potentially death. And I mean, all of them, every person caught up in the Aerosmith whirlwind spent a large majority of this book in proper danger. When there were only pages left to go, I nearly had a panic attack. It felt like I was down to my last line and I wasn't sure where my next order of Aerosmith was going to come from. But in the end, I have no regrets, and am grateful for this book, as it satisfactorily indulged my addiction, so much so that it felt like food at times. Because the thing about Aerosmith, is that they are the embodiment of the holy trinity: the sex, the drugs, and the rock 'n' roll. But no matter how much of those things they excessively fell into, the rock 'n' roll itself was always about the sex and the drugs anyway, so maybe that's the key to musical immortality? Whatever, I don't know what I'm saying anymore, I'm still coming down. What I do know, however, is that this book inspired me louder than anything I've read for a long time, perhaps ever, and I just want to focus on my own music now. Great book for fans of Aerosmith. I tried, I really tried to like this book and to finish it but at the end of months, give or take I had to accept that I did not like this at all. I'm a big fan of music bios because I love to read the debauchery but this did not cut it for me. From the start I thought Aerosmiths history was long, granted I became very impressed by Steven Tyler but overall I thought the introduction was heavy on history and people and it felt bogged down. I was very impressed by Steven Tylers musical abilities but at the same time I hated, HATED his style because he sounded like a s valley girl, it was disorientating. As for the other authors they were ok but not memorable. Overall, the book had too many voices and they weren't united enough to make one voice, Aerosmith. I did hear that the audiobook is better so maybe one day I'll give the audiobook a chance. So yeah I did not like it at all but if you like Aerosmith and totally don't mind the way Steven Tyler speaks then sure give it a try. A fascinating, inspiring, and entertaining story for sure. I have way more respect for Aerosmith after reading this and I've gone back into their catalog and dug out their early albums. My only complaint is that the editing isn't that great. The stories can be disjointed at times. The Dirt is a book about degenerate rockstars who got lucky and did some crazy stuff. And the storytelling was amazing. Walk This Way is a book about an unlikely group of guys who had a dream, worked their asses off, made it big, lost it all, and then came back. The story is great, the storytelling is ok. Budds Purugganan. Aerosmithsex,drugs,Liv or die, what more can I say? John Bonham of Zep died at age The story when drummer Joey Kramer visited J. Bonham's grave was a spectacular segment of this bestsellerdrummer visits late drummer for a tribute. Robert Plant did see Aerosmith in one chapter Drop the Harry Potter fiction. This book is REAL! Meredith Walker. I was expecting to enjoy this at lot more than a did. Not only band members but all range of people were given voice in this way, which detracted from the main players. What was interesting was reading about the origins of songs and their meanings. Bren fall in love with the sea. Great book on the band I read so long ago. I really liked that the story.. I enjoyed everyone's perspective and I consider it to be one of the better rock Bios out there. Dana Van Aert. Great biography of the band! It was well put together and has view points of other people associated with the band. So it is not just from the bands perspective. It goes into a lot of detail and includes magazine reviews and personal interviews with the band from rolling stone, creem and much more. The story feels like a plane taking off, Aerosmith has a hard take off but gets into the air, from there it is one hell of a ride! With the band you feel like your flying high really high but at the same time your being dragged on the ground. After all the the craziness and wild times we come in for a smooth mellow landing. BUT it leaves you with your mind blown and have a hankering for more! My only real complaint is that during the middle of the story when they gain popularity and the drug abuse really kicks up the story is a little hard to follow. Stephen Davis does his best to piece the whole time period together but with so much going on the timeline jumps around a little. Sarah Karen. Was expecting a whole lot more from this read. Michael C. A pretty engaging oral history-style biography of Aerosmith. Hooolllly shit, was Steven Tyler gacked out of his mind for years on end. Chris Colby. Aerosmith did what they did first. Motley did it more notoriously. I've read both, and the winner is Aerosmith. I don't want to put spoilers in. So I'll just encourage anyone who enjoys a good, pretty unbelievable but absolutely true story to give it a try. Think drugs. Relationship drama. Internal fighting. External fighting. Illegitimate children, at least one of which turned into a movie star. More drugs. A famous intervention. Counseling and therapy. Albums that sold million copies each. Motley's book is raunchier and details so much insane behavior at times it's difficult to believe it was true. And the material is put out there in a sort of braggadocious way, like they were proud of the terrible way they acted, especially toward women. Aerosmith's book is less raunchy, focuses more on the personalities and the internal politics and struggles, as well as stories that go behind the scenes of how some of their most beloved songs came about. And when it describes the drugs and the booze and the out-of-control heights their egos went to, it's not written as if they're bragging. You can easily imagine the band members shaking their heads in dismay while they were remembering what happened and writing about it, thinking about how close they came to blowing everything. This book is unique because each member of Aerosmith plus others contributes to the story. Their names appear with their narrative, and it's nice to get the different views on things. The story starts off a little slow, with everyone talking about their roots and their early days as musicians. Things start to get interesting when Aerosmith starts to come together. They worked very hard to get where they are today. The stories about their wild behavior will entertain you and maybe even shock you. He was quite the character and had a big hand in making Aerosmith big again. This is a good book if you're at all interested in Aerosmith, or interested in hearing tales of excess and craziness. It was nice to hear the story from ALL the members of Aerosmith. Favorite part: Their early days before the fame hit. Favorite character: Steven Tyler, of course! He's the star. A book of obvious interest to Aerosmith fans. The book is written in an interview format, starting with each band member's early years and each person is included in the narrative as they are involved. The interviews were conducted starting in and ending in about , although the writer Stephen Davis adds postscripts that go through about , when Aerosmith was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The major topics throughout the book are of course, the music and looming just as large for many years, the drug problems of all five band members. They break up with each other, with various wives and girlfriends, with managers, and their struggles to end bad habits. Interesting, but glad I'm not part of that world. I'm amazed they have been able to bounce back from their demons. They were told how to walk, how to dress, how to style their hair, how to rock This is the autobiography of Aerosmith told from the perspective of every member of the band in addition to producers and other important persons in the band's history. As in every rock biography, it covers your basics of sex, drugs, and rock n' roll. However, Aerosmith isn't your typical band of misfits It was really neat to hear the stories told from everyone involved. Loved hearing how all those songs we all love so much were written. A truly triumphant story for any Aerosmith fan to enjoy. M Tremmel. Tell all book that will send shivers down your swine. The fact that these folks are still alive is the miracle. This is definitely a slice of life from the music scene during the 70s and 80s when everyone was on dope and cocaine including agents, managers, and producers. Most interesting sections are told by Steven Tyler who although flamboyant was a musical prodigy and really has a good 'Don't do drugs' message unlike Joe Perry. Steven's daughter, Liv Tyler, who learned who her father was in her teens has the best one-liner in the book when she calls the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame induction 'a prom for F-ups. Great insight on how, when and where Aerosmith began and what the guys did for a living before Aerosmith. I liked how each person told his own side of the story. I am amazed they did not kill each other or themselves with all the drugs and alcohol consumed. All the woman who used and were used does not surprise me. It truly paints a ugly side of Rock and Roll but also show the perks side of fame. If you are a Aerosmith fan you are going to love this book, if you are a music fan you will enjoy this book. Monica De giudici. Bah a parte una vaga somiglianza tra i cantanti, direi anche no. Fino a circa 30 anni e 12 album dopo: una band di fama mondiale che riempie gli stadi e che ha venduto milioni di dischi. Nel mezzo li si vede comporre insieme le prime canzoni, suonare a feste di liceo, poi Boston, i primi album, arrivare al successo con 'Toys in the Attic' e suonare davanti E poi la fama, le copertine, le dipendenze da soldi, da droga, da sesso. Sembra che il sogno sia diventato un incubo e che la fine sia inevitabile E non solo. E poi Guardate Slash come si pone sul palco! Altra cosa che ho apprezzato molto sono quei bei paragrafi in corsivo, in cui si racconta, album dopo album, come si svolgevano i concerti, tra setlist, coreografie e aneddoti a tema. Lo so che mi ripeto Ma quanto vorrei rivederli!! Per il resto Benjamin Kahn. I want to preface this review by saying that when I started it, I was also reading Joe Perry's autobiography at the same time, which I enjoyed much more and finished reading much sooner, so I had already read about a lot of the ups and downs of the bands. That may have colored my opinion of this book. And although I had all of their albums at one point up to and including Pump. I found this book overly long. I didn't really like Steven Tyler. And every time that Steve Davis Aerosmith's co-writer takes over from the band, he's really boring. He tends to ramble, trying to tie Aeromsith's story in with world events at the time, but it just comes off pretentiously. And he makes a Spinal Tap reference, getting it completely wrong. Did he ever see the movie? Or read a synopsis? A good editor could have made this much more readable. I really felt that the book crawled along, with only brief flashes of interest, and spent too much time on uninteresting anecdotes. I found the fact that he basically adopted a 14 year old girl to have sex with rather upsetting, and the fact that nobody seemed to want to speak out about this. He basically blows it off by saying 'well, I stole her childhood, but I was on drugs, so I don't feel guilty - you don't think clearly on drugs. I also think all the warm talk about when Liv Tyler finds out he's her father is kind of crap as well - he avoided taking any responsibility for her for the first 14 years, and then acts like it's a great moment when she figures out she's really his daughter and he lets her use his last name. I come away with the impression that there are four decent guys in Aerosmith, and one scumbag. Since I've had a crush on Steven Tyler since I was 12 years old, I read this book the day it was released, some years ago. Much of this info I already knew due to my 'information junkie' personality and, of course, the existence of the world wide web. Even so, it was extremely interesting to hear the story from the perspective of band members. There is a somewhat dark and depressing nature to the truth. The amazing party life that I thought they were living back in the 70's, when I was a young teen, was revealed for what it really was. More reviews and ratings. Join the discussion. Can't find what you're looking for? Help center.
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