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aerosmith

Former Guns N’ Roses drummer Matt Sorum has dismissed suggestions that Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler will ever return to the touring circuit.
Sorum’s claims arrived just weeks after Tyler made a return to the stage as part of his sixth annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party. With Sorum serving as Musical Director, the event was only the second time that Tyler had performed live since a 2023 vocal injury which halted Aerosmith’s touring schedule, and the first time since the band announced their formal retirement in August of 2024.

Performing alongside Extreme’s Nuno Bettencourt, Tyler sung covers of songs by Extreme and Led Zeppelin, and four Aerosmith staples, which saw the musician joined by the likes of Mick Fleetwood, Lainey Wilson, the Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson, Jessie J, and Aerosmith bassist Tom Hamilton. However, despite the positive response from fans, Sorum told Joe Rock of Long Island radio station WBAB (via Blabbermouth) that the strain of global touring would prevent Tyler from performing on a large scale once again.

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“Some fans were a little bit, like, ‘Well, he can sing.’ Well, let me just explain what’s happening with Steven Tyler, ’cause he’s a really good friend,” Sorum explained. “He went out and sang. And it was a really big moment for him because he hurt himself bad. Now, is he gonna tour again? No, he’s not. Because, and I explained this to people, Steven cannot put himself under the rigors of doing a full worldwide tour because there’s a lot of pressure. 

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“And if you’re not a singer, you wouldn’t understand what he goes through, but he’s 77 years old and he’s a perfectionist. And if he doesn’t sing correctly, it bothers him. And he’s not gonna put it on tape, like 80 percent of the people that are out there taking your money. He will not be on tape, and he won’t change the keys of the song. That’s just who he is. He’s, like, ‘I’m an artist. I’m a singer. This is my band. I’ve been doing this for 50 years. And if I can’t do it perfect, I can’t do it.’ And I respect that. 

“I talked to him about it multiple times,” added Sorum. “I said, ‘So, just sing four or five songs tops.’ He says, ‘I can do that.’ And that was just one time. Maybe down the line, he’ll do it again and possibly do the same amount of songs.”

Initially, early reports of Tyler’s recent live appearance claimed that the performance would in fact be an Aerosmith reunion. If it were true, it would have been the group’s first live show since Sept. 2023.

While performing in Elmont, NY on Sept. 9 of that year, Tyler fractured his larynx, necessitating the postponement of shows on their Peace Out tour. Ultimately, these shows were canceled entirely when the band announced their retirement from touring in August 2024.

In January, Hamilton spoke to Boston’s WBUR to provide an update on Tyler’s health status, and to provide an insight into future Aerosmith activity. “Maybe Aerosmith will do something in the future, but it’s a big if and the last thing I want to be doing is to try and push Steven in that direction,” he explained. “If we do anything in the future, it would come from him.”

While the music world didn’t receive its highly-anticipated Aerosmith reunion over the weekend, the reality wasn’t far off, with frontman Steven Tyler making his long-awaited return to the stage.

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In January, reports emerged that Tyler’s sixth annual Jam for Janie Grammy Awards Viewing Party would be taking place on Sunday (Feb. 2) at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, with Aerosmith set to make a return performance.

Alongside appearances from Billy Idol, Joan Jett, Lainey Wilson, Tom Hamilton, Linda Perry, Matt Sorum, and Nuno Bettencourt, the reported Aerosmith reunion would have been the group’s first live show since Sept. 2023.

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While performing in Elmont, NY on Sept. 9 of that year, Tyler fractured his larynx, necessitating the postponement of shows on their Peace Out tour. Ultimately, these shows were canceled entirely when the band announced their retirement from touring in August 2024.

Though excitement for a reunion from Aerosmith members was high in the lead up to the Jam for Janie event on Sunday, the result was equally appreciated when Tyler took to the stage for a rare live appearance. Ultimately, the likes of Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry weren’t on hand for the night, though bassist Tom Hamilton was. 

Performing with Extreme’s Nuno Bettencourt, Tyler’s six-song set featured a rendition of Aerosmith’s “Toys in the Attic”, Extreme’s “More Than Words” with Mick Fleetwood, and “Dream On” with Lainey Wilson. Joined by Hamilton and the Black Crowes’ Chris Robinson for performances of “Sweet Emotion”, and “Walk This Way” (which also featured English singer Jessie J), the high-profile set closed out with a cover of Led Zeppelin’s “Heartbreaker”.

Sunday’s performance was only Tyler’s second time appearing on stage since his vocal injury. In May 2024 – months before Aerosmith announced their retirement from touring – Tyler performed “Mama Kin” with the Black Crowes in London. At the time, the Black Crowes were planning to resume their role as the opening act for Aerosmith’s then-postponed Peace Out tour later in the year.

It’s currently unclear whether Tyler’s return to the live stage could result in anything more in the future, though Hamilton did speak to Boston’s WBUR in January to give an update on the possibility of one-off Aerosmith appearances down the line.

“Steven’s healing process is going really, really well, but it goes at its own pace,” Hamilton told the station. “Maybe Aerosmith will do something in the future, but it’s a big if and the last thing I want to be doing is to try and push Steven in that direction.

“If we do anything in the future, it would come from him,” he added.

More than a decade since it first launched, Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer has announced the closure of his Rockin’ & Roastin’ Coffee line.
Kramer announced the news via a message shared to the coffee brand’s website on Friday (Nov. 29), citing “no realistic alternative” to its impending closure.

“To all of Rockin’ & Roastin”s loyal subscribers and my coffee loving fans along the way – It is with deep deep sadness that we have had to make the decision to close the business of Rockin & Roastin’ Coffee,” the message read.

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After the years of working to recover from the devastation to our business from the impact of Covid, significant increases in the cost of doing business and the tragic, painful loss of my wife, Linda, there just is no realistic alternative but to close our proverbial doors.“

Kramer closed the post by noting that all orders received trough Saturday, Nov. 30 would be filled, but no orders will be taken thereafter.

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Rockin’ & Roastin’ Coffee was first launched by Kramer in 2012 after years spent on the road as a touring musician and being subjected to copious cups of bad coffee.

“I set out to streamline my experiences and become a coffee expert,” he said. “I knew I had to come up with something that would satiate even the most discerning java enthusiast.

“After countless amounts of research (I might be an honorary chemist by now), sampling endless batches and hitting the presses in nearly every continent, my Rockin’ & Roastin’ Coffee dream was born. The result? Some of the finest, purest kick-ass coffee on the planet, sure to please the palate of any ‘coffee-sseur.’”

In 2013, Rockin’ & Roastin’ Coffee landed a hotel partnership deal, and in 2016, Joey Kramer‘s Rockin’ & Roastin’ Cafe opened its doors in North Attleboro, Mass., about 40 miles outside Aerosmith‘s birthplace of Boston.

The news comes just months after Aerosmith announced their retirement from touring amid Steven Tyler‘s ongoing vocal cord injury.

“We’ve seen him struggling despite having the best medical team by his side,” the group wrote in a message on social media in early August. “Sadly, it is clear, that a full recovery from his vocal injury is not possible. We have made a heartbreaking and difficult, but necessary, decision – as a band of brothers – to retire from the touring stage.”

Aerosmith thanked their crew and team before concluding with a message to their fans. “A final thank you to you – the best fans on planet Earth. Play our music loud, now and always. Dream On. You’ve made our dreams come true,” they wrote.