• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Beyonce performs "Single Ladies"  at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards in New York, September 13, 2009.     REUTERS/Gary Hershorn

Pictures of the year: Entertainment

A look at the year's best entertainment photos.   Slideshow 

    Aerosmith's Joe Perry turns to fans for album title

    Thu Jul 2, 2009 10:04pm EDT
    Joe Perry of Aerosmith and his wife Billie Paulette Montgomery arrive on the red carpet for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2009 induction ceremonies in Cleveland in this Ohio April 4, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk

    DETROIT (Billboard) - Aerosmith's next album might be "on the bench, in pieces," waiting for the group to resume recording after it finishes touring in mid-September, but guitarist Joe Perry's next solo album is just about ready to go.

    Entertainment  |  Music

    Perry tells Billboard.com that he's finishing mixing the follow-up to 2005's Grammy-nominated "Joe Perry." He plans to release a single in late July or early August, and the album will come out in the fall.

    The one thing Perry doesn't have yet is a title; for that he's holding a contest via Twitter, asking fans for suggestions. If he chooses a fan's idea, the winner will receive a guitar.

    "It's tough, obviously, without having heard the record for people to name it," he notes, "but we may find something really good. There've already been a bunch that are possibilities."

    Perry says the set is a departure from his previous solo outing. "The last one was a straight-ahead rocker. This one's got some different things on it."

    The album was recorded in about seven weeks at Perry's home studio, The Boneyard; he shares lead vocal duties with a German singer who his wife, Billie, discovered on the Internet, and there's one instrumental track. David Hull from the Joe Perry Project and Ben Tileston, who plays with two of Perry's sons in TAB The Band, were also involved.

    "We were working around the clock, through weekends and everything, and it was all live," Perry says. "In fact, a lot of the vocals are live along with the rest of the band. (Sound) was bleeding from one track to another; if somebody had a bad take everybody had a bad take, and we played it 'til we got a good one. Of course we went in and overdubbed a lot of the other stuff, but the energy is there. You can feel it."

    Once the album is released, Perry hopes to hit the road with his own band for "a short, fast, hard tour. That's what I'm really looking forward to ... getting back out there with some old friends and some other musicians and doing it like the old days."

    The Aerosmith album, its first since 2004's "Honkin' on Bobo," will also be a consideration at that point as the group -- which wraps its current tour with ZZ Top on September 16 -- hits the studio again with producer Brendan O'Brien.

    "That is the next project right after we get off the road," Perry says. "We'll take a little break and then put it together. I'm hoping it will come together pretty fast, but I've been saying that for five years."

    (Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    U.S. official admits security failed in air scare

    WASHINGTON/ABUJA (Reuters) - The Obama administration admitted on Monday that air travel security failed when a Nigerian man with suspected ties to Islamic militants allegedly was able to smuggle deadly explosives onto a U.S.-bound flight in an attempt to blow it up.

    Armed men travel on a vehicle on a road near the Saudi border in the western Yemeni province of Hajja October 10, 2009. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah

    The next al Qaeda hub?

    The attempted Christmas Day bombing of an American airliner has put another region in the spotlight as a breeding ground for terrorism.  Full Article 

    EDITORS' NOTE: Reuters and other foreign media are subject to Iranian restrictions on their ability to film or take pictures in Tehran. Iranian opposition supporters beat police forces during clashes in central Tehran December 27, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Stringer

    Violence erupts in Iran

    Police fired teargas at anti-government protesters in Tehran a day after some of the hardest clashes seen since a disputed election in June.  Full Article | Video