Draw_the_Line_(Aerosmith_album)

<i>Draw the Line</i> (Aerosmith album)

Draw the Line (Aerosmith album)

1977 studio album by Aerosmith


Draw the Line is the fifth studio album by American hard rock band Aerosmith, released on December 9, 1977. It was recorded between June–October in an abandoned convent near New York City.[3] The portrait of the band on the album cover was drawn by the celebrity caricaturist Al Hirschfeld.

Quick Facts Draw the Line, Studio album by Aerosmith ...

Background

By 1977, Aerosmith had released four studio albums, the two most recent  Toys in the Attic (1975) and Rocks (1976)  catapulting the band to stardom. However, as the band began recording its next album, Draw the Line, their excessive lifestyle, combined with constant touring and drug use, began to take its toll. "Draw the Line was untogether because we weren't a cohesive unit anymore," guitarist Joe Perry admitted in the Stephen Davis band memoir Walk This Way. "We were drug addicts dabbling in music, rather than musicians dabbling in drugs."[4]

Although the LP would sell well more than a million copies in fewer than six weeks after its release, in 2014 Perry would refer to it as "the beginning of the end" and "the decay of our artistry."[5]

Writing

Largely due to their drug consumption, both Tyler and Perry were not as involved in the writing and recording as they had been on previous albums. According to Perry: "A lot of people had input into that record because Steven and I had stopped giving a fuck. "Draw the Line," "I Want To Know Why," and "Get It Up" were the only things Steven and I wrote together. Tom, Joey and Steven came up with "Kings and Queens," and Brad played rhythm and lead. Brad and Steven wrote "The Hand That Feeds," which I didn't even play on because I'd stayed in bed the day they recorded it and Brad played great on it anyway.[4]

For his part, Tyler has maintained that it was the band's lethargy, not his, that slowed his progress, because "I wasn't Patti Smith writing poetry. I write exactly to the music, and when the music ain't coming, neither were the lyrics."[6] However, Tyler confessed to Alan di Perna of Guitar World in April 1997, "What I specifically remember was not being present in the studio because I was so stoned. In the past, I always had to be there and hear every note that was going down  who was playing what and were they out of tune ... I just didn't care anymore."

In his autobiography Rocks, Perry admits that he had misplaced a cookie tin full of demos for the band that he had prepared in his basement studio, irritating Douglas, but they were eventually found by Perry's wife Elyssa:[7] "Among those tapes was not only the fully realized "Bright Light Fright," but tracks that led to other songs like "I Want To Know Why," "Get It Up" and "Draw the Line," the title tune. Something I'd started with David Johansen became "Sight for Sore Eyes." But the lyrics literally took months for Steven to write, and by then we were back at the Record Plant in New York."[8]

Of "Draw the Line", Tyler later recalled, "Joe had this lick on a six-string bass that was so definitive, the song just about wrote itself. It reached down my neck and grabbed the lyrics out of my throat."[9] Tyler explains the meaning of the lyrics "Carrie...was a wet-nap winner": "Well, a wet-nap is something that you wipe babies' asses with. Back in the day, if you were lucky enough to grab a stewardess on a plane and you came out of the bathroom, all you had to clean up with was a wet-nap. The best lyrics are like the scrambled eggs you have in your head about a situation. And I've got this uncanny way of weaving shit together. To be honest, in everyday dealings, I'll talk to people, and they go, "What the fuck are you talking about?"[10]

Producer Jack Douglas wrote the lyrics to "Critical Mass" about a dream he had during the sessions. He explains, "The lyrics to "Critical Mass" came from a dream I had at the Cenacle. I never expected Steven to record it, but he didn't have anything else, so he used my lyrics as written."[6]

"Get It Up" features Karen Lawrence, singer of the band L.A. Jets, on the chorus. David Krebs later stated that he felt Tyler's lyrics on songs like "Get It Up" did not help the album's standing among Aerosmith fans: "The essence of Aerosmith had always been a positive and very macho sexuality, total unashamed, a little sleazy ... They didn't want to hear lyrics like 'Get It Up,' which repeated over and over again, Can't get it up' ... The negative lyrics were a big problem."[11]

Perry performs lead vocals on his solo composition "Bright Light Fright", which was inspired by the Sex Pistols.[4] He remembers a lukewarm reception when he presented the song to the band: They "didn't like it. I said, 'Do you want to do it or not?' They said no."[6]

Douglas difficulty completing "Kings and Queens". He remembers, "with "Kings and Queens," Steven and I wrote the lyrics together, which was like pulling teeth.[6] In his memoir, Tyler writes that the song's lyrics were inspired by a "medieval fantasy" that featured "a stoned-out rock star in his tattered satin rags lying on the ancient stone floor of a castle - slightly mad, but still capable of conjuring up a revolutionary album that would astound the ears of the ones who heard it and make the critics cringe."[12] He continues in the Pandora's Box liner notes: "This one was just about how many people died from holy wars because of their beliefs or non-beliefs. With that one, my brain was back with the knights of the round table..."[13] Drummer Joey Kramer remembers recording "Kings and Queens" at a "typical session at the Cenacle. It was recorded in the chapel with the pews out, the drums on the altar. Jack was in the confessional, hitting the snare drum by himself."[6] Jack Douglas plays the mandolin on the track.

"Sight for Sore Eyes" originated during the sessions for David Johansen's first solo album. Joe Perry plays on two tracks on the solo debut by the New York Dolls singer.

The album concludes with an Elvis Presley cover, Kokomo Arnold's "Milk Cow Blues". The group frequently played the song live earlier in the decade, with Perry on vocals.

Recording

Producer Jack Douglas, who had started producing the band with Get Your Wings in 1974, expressed similar feelings about the apathy that permeated the recording sessions: "So I started Draw the Line, and for a while gave it my all. But because they were half-hearted about the record, I was too. Steven wasn't writing at all."[6] He continues, "I was working on Draw the Line, which was approaching the end of Aerosmith's inspiration. It was just too much road, not enough time to write, too much excess. Too much money! I mean when you've got two weeks off and you're told to go write songs for your next album, and you've got all this money, you're gonna want to go out and have some fun, not sit at home banging out notes and words. I had to go out on a world tour with Aerosmith, just to finish it. Everytime they were near a studio, I'd pull them in to finish up the record."[14]

Between attempts at recording at the Wherehouse and additional sessions during their Summer 1977 tour of North America and Europe, the group moved into the Cenacle, a de-consecrated monastery in Westchester County, New York. According to Tyler's autobiography, manager David Krebs suggested that the band record its next album at the estate near Armonk, New York "away from the temptation of drugs." The plan failed miserably, however, with Tyler recalling, "Drugs can be imported, David ... we have our resources. Dealers deliver! Hiding us away in a three hundred room former convent was a prescription for total lunacy."[12] Perry remembers the setting: "The Cenacle included sixty acres, with a great big house, and the Record Plant installed a studio for us. I don't know how much it cost us, but it was outrageous. They had a bar and people serving us... I'd wake up at four or five in the afternoon and say 'one Black Russian please'. We had motorcycles and Porsches and we'd go cruising around the countryside terrorizing everybody. We had a great time up there..."[15] In the VH1 Behind the Music episode on the group, Douglas states, "People were shooting, bullets were flying. It was insane. People, drugs and guns. You know, they don't go together," with drummer Joey Kramer adding, "I don't know if we did any of those sessions, or made any of that record, straight."

Album cover and title

Artist Al Hirschfeld visited the group during the sessions at the Cenacle to draw the iconic album cover. Tyler remembers, "The cartoonist Al Hirschfeld came up while we were there and drew the caricature of the group that's on the cover of Draw the Line. He really nailed us. We look like freakish botanical specimens pinned under glass. Draw the Line—it was the perfect title for the way we were living. I always went too far and was often reminded that I never knew where to draw the line. I hated to hear that, but that's how it was. Say 'Don't do it,' and we would do it. 'Cause I knew that if you don't know where to draw the line, then your choices become infinite."[16] Douglas continues, "Draw The Line is a classic title that says it all, the coke lines, heroin lines, drawing symbolic lines and crossing them all – no matter what."[17]

Reception

Contemporary reviews were mixed. Billy Altman of Rolling Stone called the LP "a truly horrendous record, chaotic to the point of malfunction and with an almost impenetrably dense sound adding to the confusion."[22] Robert Christgau considered the album the product of a band "out of gas".[18] The Globe and Mail opined that "'Critical Mass' and 'Get It Up' are both bright numbers with solid rhythms while 'Draw the Line' and 'I Wanna Know Why' didn't deserve preservation."[23]

Retrospective reviews are more positive. Kerrang! magazine listed the album at No. 37 among the "100 Greatest Heavy Metal Albums of All Time" for its "high energy", although it never touches heavy metal as a genre, concluding with the comment "sleaze was never so classy."[24] According to Greg Prato of AllMusic, "the band shies away from studio experimenting and dabbling in different styles," returning "to simple, straight-ahead hard rock" and releasing "the last true studio album from Aerosmith's original lineup for nearly a decade."[3] Another AllMusic reviewer stated that, "although some fans see Draw the Line as the beginning of a decline for Aerosmith, it still offers up some strong hard-rock tunes. One of its best moments is the title track, one of the group's most relentless rockers."[25] In a review for Ultimate Classic Rock, Sterling Whitaker cited "Get It Up" as an example of a track that "should-have-been-great-but-not-quite," saying that it "featured important elements of the classic Aerosmith sound, but somehow didn't catch fire."[26] Martin Popoff defined Draw the Line "complicated, murky and layered", coming across as "the serious, distressed Aerosmith album". He also wrote that despite "being ambiguously dense, uncommunicative and busy", the album showed the band reaching "new levels of musical maturity."[19]

Draw the Line went platinum its first month of release, entering the music charts on December 24, 1977,[27] peaking at No. 11 on the US Billboard 200,[28] and eventually being certified 2x platinum nearly a decade later.[29] Even so, it marks the band's first slowdown in album sales of their 1970s era, after their initial rise with the albums Toys in the Attic and Rocks.[29]

Track listing

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Personnel

Aerosmith

  • Steven Tyler  lead vocals, harmonica, piano on "Kings and Queens", backing vocals on "Bright Light Fright"
  • Joe Perry  lead guitar; rhythm guitar on "Kings and Queens", "I Wanna Know Why", "The Hand That Feeds"; slide guitar and second solo of "Milk Cow Blues"; backing vocals, lead vocals on "Bright Light Fright"
  • Brad Whitford  rhythm guitar, lead guitar on "Kings and Queens", "I Wanna Know Why", "The Hand That Feeds", and first solo of "Milk Cow Blues"
  • Tom Hamilton  bass guitar
  • Joey Kramer  drums, percussion

Guest musicians

  • Stan Bronstein  saxophone on "I Wanna Know Why" and "Bright Light Fright"
  • Scott Cushnie  piano on "I Wanna Know Why", "Critical Mass", and "Kings and Queens"
  • Karen Lawrence  backing vocals on "Get It Up"
  • Jack Douglas  mandolin on "Kings and Queens"
  • Paul Prestopino  acoustic guitar, banjo guitar on "Kings and Queens"

Production

Charts

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Certifications

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References

  1. LTD, BubbleUp (December 9, 2021). "AeroHistory: Draw the Line". www.aerosmith.com. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
  2. Greg Prato. "Draw the Line - Aerosmith". AllMusic. Retrieved November 19, 2022. Unlike their most recent album successes, the band shies away from studio experimenting and dabbling in different styles; instead they return to simple, straight-ahead hard rock.
  3. Prato, Greg. "Aerosmith: Draw the Line  Review". AllMusic. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  4. Perry & Ritz 2014, p. 170-179.
  5. Perry & Ritz 2014, p. 171-173.
  6. Steven Tyler. Scaggs, Austin, Rolling Stone, 0035791X, 8/2/2012, Issue 1162
  7. Pandora's Box (CD liner). Aerosmith. United States: Columbia Records. 2002 [1991]. C3K 86567.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  8. Record Review. October 1981.
  9. Creem. December, 1978.
  10. Tyler, Steven, and David Dalton. 2011. Does the Noise in My Head Bother You? : A Rock “N” Roll Memoir. New York: Ecco Press.
  11. Elliott, Paul. Drugs and Dysfunction: How Aerosmith Made Draw the Line and Night in the Ruts. Louder. April 7, 2020. https://www.loudersound.com/features/drugs-and-dysfunction-how-aerosmith-made-draw-the-line-and-night-in-the-ruts.
  12. Christgau, Robert. "Aerosmith- Consumer Guide Reviews: Draw the Line". Robert Christgau. Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  13. Popoff, Martin (October 2003). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 1: The Seventies. Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Collector's Guide Publishing. pp. 18–19. ISBN 978-1894959025.
  14. MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide. Visible Ink Press. 1996. p. 6.
  15. Kot, Greg. "Aerosmith - Album Guide". Rolling Stone. Jann S. Wenner. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  16. Altman, Billy (March 19, 1978). "Draw the Line". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  17. McGrath, Paul (December 21, 1977). "Aerosmith". The Globe and Mail. p. F8.
  18. Zell, Ray (January 21, 1989). "Aerosmith 'Draw the Line'". Kerrang!. No. 222. London, UK: Spotlight Publications Ltd. Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  19. Guarisco, Donald A. "Aerosmith - Draw the Line song review". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  20. Whitaker, Sterling (December 2, 2013). "36 Years Ago – Aerosmith Release 'Draw the Line'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
  21. Billboard: December 24, 1977, page 152; Cash Box: December 24, 1977, page 55; Record World: December 24, 1977, page 44
  22. "Aerosmith Chart History: Billboard 200". Billboard.com. Billboard. Retrieved July 26, 2018.
  23. "Le Détail des Albums de chaque Artiste – A". Infodisc.fr (in French). Archived from the original on October 22, 2014. Retrieved June 9, 2012. Select Aerosmith from the menu, then press OK.
  24. Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970–2005 (in Japanese). Roppongi, Tokyo: Oricon Entertainment. 2006. ISBN 4-87131-077-9.

Bibliography


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