Aerosmith can put on one hell of a show and are still very much doing so today. The rock bandโs career has spanned 15 albums, 54 years, and countless tours. Youโd think theyโd cover every song in their discography by now during their live sets. However, there are a few songs out there that Aerosmith will rarely perform live; and some that have never been heard live, period. Letโs look at four examples!
1. โOut Go The Lightsโ
This track from the 2012 record Music From Another Dimension! has rarely ever been heard live from the band in the years since it was released. Itโs a seven-minute jam session that the band would adjust and change live on the rare occasion that they would perform it. Nowadays, though, the song isnโt heard all that often. Itโs not abundantly clear why, but thereโs a chance the band prefers to play better-known hits rather than deep cuts.
Videos by American Songwriter
2. โCritical Massโ
โCritical Massโ is from the bandโs 1977 album Draw The Line. Itโs another somewhat bluesy rock track that didnโt get much love when it was released. Itโs also rarely performed live, and apparently that is because the band isnโt that keen on it.
In the Aerosmith memoir Walk This Way, producer Jack Douglas said that Steven Tyler took lyrics he had written and didnโt alter them in any way; namely because he was too high out of his mind to write anything on his own.
3. โJoanieโs Butterflyโ
Rock In A Hard Place is one of the bandโs albums that rarely gets any playtime on stage. The album has only one single, โLightning Strikesโ, which occasionally makes it to set lists nowadays. Another track from the album is โJoanieโs Butterflyโ, which became a bit of a fan-favorite deep cut. Unfortunately, the psychedelic song allegedly full of sexual metaphors never gets a live performance. This is likely due to the fact that it was written during a period when Joe Perry wasnโt in the band, and the album itself is not very popular.
4. โAinโt That A B*tchโ
This Nine Lives single is a great example of how raspy and high Tyler can go with his screams. Itโs a lovely little ballad, but itโs unlikely that Tyler can sing it safely decades later. Plus, the song as a whole is just very hard to play; weโre lucky we even got a recorded version.
Photo by Katarina Benzova
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
Most Viewed
-

The Beatles at the press launch for their new album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', held at Brian Epstein's house at 24 Chapel Street, London, 19th May 1967. Left to right: George Harrison (1943 – 2001), Ringo Starr, John Lennon (1940 – 1980) and Paul McCartney. (Photo by John Downing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)







