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Tyler took 'Idol' job to send message to band

In the story, the singer talks about his motivation for signing on as an "American Idol" judge — a move he made after his bandmates threatened to throw him out of Aerosmith.
/ Source: Rolling Stone

The new issue of Rolling Stone, on stands and in the digital archive on April 29, includes an in-depth cover story on Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler by writer Brian Hiatt, who finds the Aerosmith frontman overflowing with positive energy. "I'm really lucky right now," Tyler says as he hikes to a edge of a Laurel Canyon cliff. "I'm on top of the world: I'm Hollywood's little ... sweetheart, basically."

In the story, Tyler talks about his motivation for signing on as an "American Idol" judge — a move he made after his bandmates threatened to throw him out of Aerosmith. "Did I take this job to show the band?" he says. "F---, yeah. Not to show them, but that I can't be held hostage anymore. I will be my own hostage. The band can't throw me out."

Tyler is awestruck at the Idol finalists' level of talent: “You know what, out of the 20 kids you saw tonight," he says, after watching an "Idol" episode at home, "if you could just sprinkle 10 years of smoking pot, getting (messed) up, getting laid, ... and 10 years of just life, which one of those people wouldn’t be a star?”

Tyler was one of about 40 people that the show's producers interviewed to replace Simon Cowell. "I actually saw Roger Daltrey," says Fox exec Mike Darnell. "He came in and was the complete reverse of Steve, very formal, his hair was cut, he looked like a regular guy. He had lost that sort of rock & roll charm. But Steven was unbelievably charming."

Other highlights:In the fall of 2008 Tyler flew to London to sing for Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham, who were considering starting a new project with him. "I decided, 'Well, I know that I'm mad at those [Aerosmith] guys, but I'm not that mad,'" Tyler says. "So I called Jimmy up after I left, two weeks later, and said, 'You're in a classic band, and so is mine, and I just can't do that to my guys, and I can't do it to Robert [Plant],' and I couldn't see finding a year to really put myself into it. So for whatever the band thought, never in a million years was I going to quit Aerosmith to start Zeppelin."

During Aerosmith's ill-fated attempt to cut a new album with producer Brendan O'Brien a couple years back, Tyler says he did drugs with Joe Perry for the first time in years. "It was just like 30 years before," Tyler says. "I whipped out mine, he whipped out his and we got high together again. I say to Joe, 'Wow, man, how you been, it's been, what, 17 years since we got high together? Joe, you've been f---ing running away from me ever since.' " Bonding aside, the album sessions didn't go well. "Joe was high and he couldn't play," says Tyler. "I couldn't sing, really, because I was snorting everything, and it (messes) up your throat. It was the wrong time." (Despite repeated requests, Perry declined to comment for this story.)

In May, Tyler is releasing his autobiography, "Does the Noise in My Head Bother You?" Around that time he'll release the first solo single of his entire career, a poppy tune called "Feels So Good." "I can hear it coming out of people's cars this summer," he says. He's also working on new material with Aerosmith: Earlier this year the entire band — minus Perry — flew to Los Angeles to work on demos, and Tyler is talking to "Toys in the Attic" producer Jack Douglas about working on some of the songs. Working titles include "Asphalt," "Bobbing for Piranha," and "Legendary Child." The story describes the material as "slinky riff-rock, big-chorused soul ballads, leaning more Seventies than Nineties."