Aerosmith - Draw The Line (2014) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Aerosmith
Title: Draw The Line
Year Of Release: 1977 / 2014
Label: Columbia
Genre: Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 35:21
Total Size: 815 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Draw The Line
Year Of Release: 1977 / 2014
Label: Columbia
Genre: Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 35:21
Total Size: 815 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Draw the Line
2. I Wanna Know Why
3. Critical Mass
4. Get It Up
5. Bright Light Fright
6. Kings and Queens
7. The Hand That Feeds
8. Sight for Sore Eyes
9. Milk Cow Blues
Aerosmith:
Steven Tyler – lead vocals
Joe Perry – guitar, backing vocals, lead vocals on "Bright Light Fright"
Brad Whitford – guitar
Tom Hamilton – bass
Joey Kramer – drums
Additional personnel:
Stan Bronstein – saxophone on "I Wanna Know Why" and "Bright Light Fright"
Scott Cushnie – piano on "I Wanna Know Why", "Kings and Queens" and "Critical Mass"
Karen Lawrence – backing vocals on "Get It Up"
Renting out an abandoned convent on the outskirts of New York City to record the follow-up to the hellacious Rocks may not have been the best idea, but 1977's Draw the Line still managed to be another down-and-dirty Aerosmith release. While it wasn't as awe-inspiring as their last two albums -- the members have said that the music suddenly got "cloudy" around this time (due to in-band fighting/ego clashes, excessive living, etc.), Draw the Line catches fire more times than not. 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. The album-opening title track features a gloriously abrasive Joe Perry slide guitar riff and has been featured in concert ever since, while the punk-esque "Bright Light Fright" featured Perry's first ever lead vocal spot on an Aerosmith record. Other highlights include a reworking of the blues obscurity "Milk Cow Blues," which Perry's pre-Aerosmith group, the Jam Band, played live, as well as "I Wanna Know Why," "Critical Mass," "Get It Up," "Kings and Queens," and "Sight for Sore Eyes." Draw the Line would turn out to be the last true studio album from Aerosmith's original lineup for nearly a decade. ~ Greg Prato