Get Your Wings

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Get Your Wings
Get Your Wings cover
Studio album by Aerosmith
Released March 1974
Recorded December 1973 - January 1974 at Record Plant Studios, New York
Genre Hard rock
Length 38:04
Label Columbia Records
Producer Ray Colcord and Jack Douglas
Professional reviews
Aerosmith chronology
Aerosmith
(1973)
Get Your Wings
(1974)
Toys in the Attic
(1975)

Get Your Wings is the second album by American hard rock band Aerosmith. This album marks the arrival of Jack Douglas in the producer's chair (a role that he would fill for the next four albums). The band had felt that a subpar production effort for their first album hurt its popularity. The raw energy that fueled their sound remained intact despite the switchover.

Contents

  1. "Same Old Song and Dance" (Steven Tyler, Joe Perry) – 3:53
  2. "Lord of the Thighs" (Tyler) – 4:14
  3. "Spaced" (Perry, Tyler) – 4:21
  4. "Woman of the World" (Tyler, Darren Solomon) – 5:49
  5. "S.O.S. (Too Bad)" (Tyler) – 2:51
  6. "Train Kept A-Rollin'" (Tiny Bradshaw, Howard Kay, Lois Mann) – 5:33
  7. "Seasons of Wither" (Tyler) – 5:38
  8. "Pandora's Box" (Tyler, Joey Kramer) – 5:43

Built around a blues riff Joe Perry came up with while sitting on his amp, Steven Tyler quickly came up with the verse riff.

After the band decided they needed one more song for the album, they locked themselves into their rehearsal room, and came up with this. The narrator is a pimp who recruits a young woman he sees on the street into prostitution. Tyler also plays the piano. Kramer's opening beat is very similar to the one he would tap out a year later in "Walk This Way".

Written by Steven Tyler and his former band, The Strangeurs.

A proto-punk song, it emphasizes the same content punk rock would soon be known for: gritty lyrics, questionable moral content, and straight to the point music.

Tiny Bradshaw's 1951 R&B classic, already turned into a rock song by The Rock and Roll Trio (Johnny and Dorsey Burnette and Paul Burlison) (1956) and updated by the The Yardbirds in a 1965 raw British blues version, after whom Aerosmith modeled their version. In the band's early days, it was their signature, show-stopping song, and is still used to end their concerts today. Despite the band's opposition, Douglas put in echo and recorded crowd noises (from the Concert for Bangla Desh) around halfway through to give it a live feel, fading into the next song's synthesized blowing wind/acoustic guitar entrance. Douglas also brought in session guitarists Dick Wagner and Steve Hunter of Rock n Roll Animal fame to play the guitars on the song in Perry's stead.[1]

In a change of pace from the rest of the album, this song is a slow, mournful ballad inspired by the Massachusetts landscape in the winter.

Joey Kramer's first writing credit, this song was written on a used guitar he found in a dumpster. It was heavily inspired by the soul musicians of the 60s and 70s.

Album

Year Chart Position
1975 Billboard Pop Albums 74

Organization Level Date
RIAA – USA Gold April 18, 1975
CIA – Canada Gold November 1, 1976
CRIA – Canada Platinum May 1, 1979
RIAA – USA Platinum November 21, 1986
RIAA – USA 2X Platinum November 21, 1986
RIAA – USA 3X Platinum February 26, 2001

  1. ^ [1]

Get Your Wings at MusicBrainz

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