Aerosmith peaked commercially from the late 1980s through the 90s. “Get a Grip,” released March 1993, is the band's best-selling album. Joe Perry’s thresher of a guitar and Steven Tyler’s highly animated vocals mix with huge pop hits like “Cryin’” and “Crazy.” It was Aerosmith’s eleventh studio album.
My favorite Aerosmith record, the 1973 self-titled debut, sounds nothing like it.
The music’s punch comes not from showmanship—Tyler’s yawps and Perry's layered, lavish guitar—but from the sound of good bluesmen vibing.
Compared to other early 70s hard rock bands, the album's dusty production—especially the low gain on Joe Perry's guitar—softens the blow a bit. In his memoir, Perry says, "… because I lacked the studio chops to prescribe a remedy, I kept quiet. It pained me, though, that my guitar was not cutting through."
But compared to Aerosmith’s later work, the album sounds raw, and I like it.
Maybe what I like most is Tyler's straight-ahead vocals. They shine more for his timing than his affectations.
I grew up with classic rock radio and heard Aerosmith’s hits and how the band’s sound changed over the decades. You have the raw, early classics like "Dream On," "Sweet Emotion," and "Walk This Way." Then comes bigger production on hits like "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)," "Angel,” "Rag Doll,” "Love in an Elevator," and "Janie's Got a Gun." And, finally, the full-on pop hits like “Amazing,” “Livin' on the Edge,” “Cryin’,” and “Crazy.”
I always liked the early songs best, so to get past the hits, I went back and listened to Aerosmith’s first four albums. The debut is easily my favorite.
Here's "Make It," the first song on the first album.