Sturgies Broken Spoke Was Rocking With Legend Steven Tyler
CyrilHuzeBlog.com
August 29, 2008
Article continued at Cyril Huze Blog: (here).
More on Broken Spoke Campground: (here).
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CyrilHuzeBlog.com
August 29, 2008
Article continued at Cyril Huze Blog: (here).
More on Broken Spoke Campground: (here).
Aero Force One
August 29, 2008
I Love New York Too!
With the closing days of summer upon us and September here, I woke up this morning unusually happy. I then read the sports page and thought to myself “oh yeah it’s because the Yankees are 10 ½ games out of first place and 6 games from the “Wild Card.” With 30 or so games left I am sure stranger things have happened but today I feel good. I have never owned anything with a NY Yankees logo on it. I wouldn’t even wear a ‘Yankees Suck!’ Or Jeter Swallows shirt. That’s not me! All I care about today is that the Yankees (I even hate typing Yankees) are behind the Red Sox in the standings. I guess the saying “I love NY too, it’s the Y%@nk**s I hate” fits me to a tee.
With that out of my system a couple of New Yorkers named Kramer and Tyler took the stage at Boston’s Hard Rock on Monday night. It was a benefit for Boston for Africa. I’m not quite sure what the benefit was benefiting but I bet it was a good cause. I heard Tom Brady’s sister was heading the thing up. Tom made an appearance at the Club and stayed for a little over an hour. I did run into him in the bowels of the Hard Rock as he was making his way out of the restaurant and into his still idling SUV waiting for him on the street. As he walked by, all time stopped. I went into slow motion mode and wished Tom good luck this season. He stuck out his hand and said “thanks a lot” and I returned with my standard reply whenever I meet a member of the Patriots family - “I’m a season ticket holder” - and like a true politician Tom responded, “thanks for the support,” as he hurried into his awaiting Dav-El driven SUV, with Gisele close behind, and drove off into the blackness of the night. His hands like granite his smile like one of the Osmond’s. I had just had an encounter with the greatest football player that has ever lived. OK, I juiced the last part up a bit for dramatic effect. But it was pretty cool none the less.
Steven had agreed to give away one of his “Redwing” motorcycles to the winner of a Guitar Hero competition that was being held at the Rock on this night too. The winner was a guy named Eric Miller from Utah that in my mind should have also won an award for having way too much time on his hands.
Steven and Joey assembled a band to play a few songs that night to cap off the event. It was basically the band Joey and James Montgomery have on the side with a different lead singer with lips the size of Rhode Island. There are several ties between this band and Aerosmith. The obvious was the bass player, David Hull who played in the Joe Perry project and then later subbed for Tom Hamilton while Tom was recovering from throat cancer. David is one of my favorite bass players to listen to. I was amazed at the sounds coming out of his rig. Paul Santo plays keyboards in Joey and James’ band but played guitar this night. Aero diehards may have seen his name before as he has been involved in a lot of recordings since Just Push Play. He was mainly an engineer in the studio but also played some keyboards on Bobo. He has worked with countless other artists but I don’t have the time or patience to list them here. Become a friend on his myspace page and stroke his ego. Then there was the other guitarist, George McCann. The only thing I could think of about George is Tom Hamilton’s father is named “George.” I shat you negative. So that’s his connection. The guys settled on a set list leaning on blues and funk. Joey is a funk guy and you can tell he is much happier playing stuff like Mother Popcorn than any blues song. The band was joined by legendary guitarist Jeff “Skunk” Baxter. I’m not quite sure why he is called Skunk and I wasn’t about to ask him. Word has it he has been working as a defense consultant, chairs a Congressional Advisory Board on missile defense, and dabbles on guitar in his spare time. I wasn’t about to mess with this overly mustached monster of a guitar player. He shredded on Walk this Way and laid down a funky rhythm bed on Mother Popcorn that would have put James Brown in a cold sweat. Jeff was a member of Steely Dan and the Doobie Brothers. He also played with 60’s band Ultimate Spinach and more recently the Blues Brothers - (thank you wikipedia)!

Photo By: John B. “Steven and Joey with Jeff ‘Skunk’ Baxter”
It was an awesome night of music and more importantly for AF1 Nation it was good to see Steven back up on stage for more than one song. His pipes sounded great and granted the stage was the size of a postage stamp he maneuvered well and seemed to be having a ball.
Steven’s plans for the next few weeks are to continue to write his book. He has mentioned to me numerous times about having journals and I’m sure it’s going to take a lot of time to sift through them.
Joey will continue to play with James Montgomery until Aerosmith hits the studio. You should really catch a show when they come near you.
Joe and his son Roman are taking part in a CBS Evening News with Katie Couric feature on A NEWS STORY Regarding HOW GUITAR HERO HAS BECOME AN EFFECTIVE PLATFORM FOR ESTABLISHED ARTISTS TO REACH A WHOLE NEW GENERATION OF MUSIC FANS. Roman is involved because he was the first one to play the game and tell his dad about it. The show is scheduled to air next week sometime.
I hear the band is going into the studio in October if the creek don’t rise and the good lord’s willin’.
See you on the Road!
John B.
Portsmouth Herald News, NH
August 29, 2008
Two classic shows kick off the fall line up at the Hampton Beach Casino Ballroom. The inventors of rock-comedy Cheech & Chong (who recently stopped feuding) will bring their “Light Up America…” tour to the Ballroom on Friday, Oct. 3 and Experience Hendrix returns to the Ballroom for the second year in a row with a line-up including Mitch Mitchell, Billy Cox, Buddy Guy, Jonny Lang, Aerosmith’s Brad Whitford, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Eric Johnson and many more. Experience Hendrix hits the beach Wednesday, Oct. 15.
Tickets to both shows go on sale Thursday, Sept. 4, Experience Hendrix at 10 a.m. and Cheech and Chong at — wait for it — 4:20 p.m. Call 929-4100, or visit www.ticketmaster.com. For information, visit www.casinoballroom.com or call the concert hotline at 929-4201.
Hill-Man hosts the Boston For Africa Gala at the Hard rock on 8.25, featuring performances by Steven Tyler and Dropkick Murphys.
Watch video: (here).
Boston Globe, MA
August 28, 2008
Steven Tyler must have been hungry after all that rocking out at the Hard Rock Cafe Monday night; he joined Longwood Events owner Jim Apteker, Richie Balsbaugh of Pyramid Radio, and owner Steve DiFillippo at Davio’s for some Philly cheese steak spring rolls and beet salad. . . .
Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer and Don Bernstein, curator for Hard Rock International, were recently spotted lunching with friends in RumBa at the InterContinental hotel. The same day, Doobie Brothers’ guitarist Jeff “Skunk” Baxter, Bernstein, and Stephen Talarico, who launched a custom line of motorcycles with Tyler, dined with friends in a private room at the hotel’s Miel Brasserie Provençale.
Aero Force One
August 26, 2008
Miriam Lamey, Spin.com

Eric Miller and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler / Photo by Rebeca Oliveira
With the astounding score of 398,000, Eric Miller blew away his rivals on stage last night in Boston, winning the booty in the Guitar Hero: Aerosmith ROCKS the Hard Rock competition. His prize? One rather stylish motorcycle signed by Aerosmith’s Steve Tyler himself. But the evening wasn’t only about Guitar Hero and motorcycles. The end to a 16-date nationwide hunt for America’s most proficient gamer coincided with the benefit gala, Boston for Africa, where citizens opened their purses for FORGE, Foundation Rwanda and Opportunity International.
Boston’s Hard Rock café was peppered with celebrities, including New England Patriots player Tom Brady. Yet the night’s true stars were undoubtedly Tyler and Aerosmith drummer Joe Kramer, who played a brief but striking set with local support! The band presented an electrifying rendition of “Walk this Way,” enhanced by Tyler’s growling vocals, a floor-shaking bass line, and that oh-so-familiar guitar riff. Tyler went on to introduce “Mother Popcorn” by joking, “How long has it been since you heard this one?” and the crowd thrilled to the funky riffs and bass, and sang excitedly over Tyler’s lead vocals during the chorus. The night ended with a surprise performance by more Beantown natives, the Dropkick Murphys, who jumped onstage to play their upbeat ballad, “The Chosen Few,” rife with hometown pride and Irish flavor.
Read the rest of the article: (here).
RedWingMotorcycles.com
August 27, 2008
Boston for Africa
“What a weekend…Sunday started out with sunshine 80 degrees and ended with about 1200 bikes in my rear view mirror…what a ride. We ended up at the Pavilion on Boston Harbor and it was time for some great music and some Slammin hot dogs. Thanks to my friends with the Mass State Police Motorcycle Unit and the Waltham PD. The escort was so cooool. The next night it was off to the Hard Rock Boston to watch the Guitar Hero Aerosmith finals, give the winner the Guitar Hero Red Wing Pro Street (I want one), and then play some music with a little help from my friends. Thanks Joey, David, Paul, George (What no Ringo), and the Skunkman…We rocked out. See you on the road.”

Joey Kramer with Tom Brady - Photo: Brian Malloy

Steven performing live at Hard Rock Cafe - Photo: Brian Malloy

Steven performing live at Hard Rock Cafe - Photo: Brian Malloy

Skunk Baxter, George, Joey Kramer, David & Paul - Photo: Brian Malloy
More at the AF1 Gallery: (here).
AF1 Forum
August 26, 2008

Steven Tyler - ‘Guitar Hero: Aerosmith’ Rocks the Hard Rock at the Hard Rock Cafe on
August 25, 2008 in Boston. (Photo by Gail Oskin/WireImage)

Joey Kramer performs at the “Guitar Hero: Aerosmith” event at the Hard Rock Cafe on
August 25, 2008 in Boston. (Photo by Gail Oskin/WireImage)

Steven Tyler - ‘Guitar Hero: Aerosmith’ Rocks the Hard Rock at the Hard Rock Cafe on
August 25, 2008 in Boston. (Photo by Gail Oskin/WireImage)

Steven Tyler - ‘Guitar Hero: Aerosmith’ Rocks the Hard Rock at the Hard Rock Cafe on
August 25, 2008 in Boston. (Photo by Gail Oskin/WireImage)
Aero Force One
August 26, 2008
By Jed Gottlieb / Music, Boston Herald
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Video game dorks and rock stars never had much in common. But that may be changing.
Last night Salt Lake City’s Eric Miller parlayed his talent for joy-stick jockeying into a full-on rock star experience, playing “Sweet Emotion” center stage at Boston’s Hard Rock Cafe and hobnobbing with Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler.
Looking more like meditating monks than guitar shredders, Miller and three other regional winners competed in Guitar Hero: Aerosmith Rocks the Hard Rock Finals before a crowd of a couple hundred.
If you’re not a “Guitar Hero” enthusiast, the game allows players simulate the real thing using a guitar-shaped controller with fret buttons that corresponded to notes that scroll on the screen. It’s difficult, pretty addictive and massively popular.
“I thought it was kinda dumb the first time I saw it,” said Miller, after besting Orlando’s Joe Ostrom during final tune “Love in an Elevator.” “I didn’t even want to try it, but a friend told me it had (Ozzy Osbourne’s) ‘Bark at the Moon’ in it, so I gave it a try.”
As champion, Miller took home a custom “Guitar Hero”/Hard Rock Cafe Red Wing motorcycle, which Tyler was nice enough to sign for him. Not bad for a 24-year-old plastic guitar slinger.
“I came here thinking I’d lose,” he said. “I was just in for the free trip to Boston.”
Helping to blur the line between real and simulated rock, both Miller and Ostrom play music and say there’s an overlap in the coordination used in the video game and actual guitar.
“I’m a keyboard player with a degree in music,” Ostrom said. “There’s definitely a link between the two.”
It was easy to believe the two guys, watching them rock out on the big screen TVs. Then Tyler and Joey Kramer took the stage with a few friends, and suddenly the game was dwarfed as the band plowed into some loud, dirty, hard-thumping Aerosmith classics.
Comfortable in the Hard Rock’s intimate Cavern Club room, Tyler led the ad hoc group through early, gritty tunes including “Walkin’ The Dog” and “Last Child.”
Both the Guitar Hero finals and the Tyler/Kramer performance were part of a charity event held by Boston for Africa 2008, which benefited organizations working to end the cycle of war and poverty in many African nations. In addition to two Bad Boys of Boston, former Doobie Brother and Steely Dan guitarist Jeff “Skunk” Baxter and Dropkick Murphys leader Ken Casey pitched in.

Eric Miller of Salt Lake City, left, won the Guitar Hero Challenge at the Boston Hard Rock Cafe’s Africa Benefit Concert and Auction on Monday and was awarded a motorcycle by Steven Tyler of Aerosmith (Photo by: Melissa Ostrow/Daily News correspondent)
BOSTON — “That’s a long time ago,” Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer said of his band’s first concert at Nipmuc High School in Mendon.
Kramer joined band mate Steven Tyler last night at the Hard Rock Cafe for the Boston for Africa VIP Gala that also served as a competition for a new video game, “Guitar Hero: Aerosmith,” which has a local connection.
Nipmuc High School is one of the venues featured in the game, which traces the band’s roots from its beginning to its induction into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame. Players can jam to Aerosmith songs at Nipmuc High School in the game. The high school has been converted to the Miscoe Hill School and replaced by a new Nipmuc High School.
“Steven and I still have the T-shirts,” Kramer said of the items they infamously stole backstage at the 1970 concert. A photo in Aerosmith’s biography, “Walk this Way,” shows Tyler wearing a shirt that reads “Nipmuc” across the front.
Having venues from the band’s career makes the game more interesting, Kramer said on the red carpet as competitors played “Sweet Emotion” inside.
“It gives it more sustenance,” Kramer said.
The winner of the competition, Eric Miller of Utah, scored almost 400,000 points while playing the “Love in an Elevator” song to walk off with a motorcycle signed by Tyler.
“You’ve got to play me now,” Tyler joked to Miller when he hopped onstage at the Hard Rock. Tyler, however, did not square off against the winner of the game.
Later in the event, comedian Lenny Clarke helped run an auction that raised tens of thousands of dollars. Boston for Africa benefits the charities FORGE, Foundation Rwanda and Opportunity International.
A throwing session with Tom Brady went for $47,000, while car czar Ernie Boch Jr. bought a ball boy experience with the Boston Celtics for $10,000.
Activision, a company involved with the video game, gave $50,000 to Boston for Africa.
To close out the event, Tyler, Kramer and other musicians rocked the hundreds in attendance with a 40-minute set that included “Walk this Way,” “Big Ten Inch Record” and “Last Child.”
Other celebrities in the house included Patriots players and Bruins players.
WHDH-TV, MA
August 26, 2008

BOSTON — Celebrities turned out for a Hero-ic event Monday evening at the Hard Rock Cafe.
Local band Aerosmith hosted a Guitar Hero contest to raise money and awareness for the charity Boston for Africa, aimed at raising awareness for the genocide and suffering in Africa.
Celebrities like Tom Brady and girlfriend Gisele, Ken Casey of the Dropkick Murphys and other Patriots attended the event.
Boston for Africa was presented with a $50,000 check and one supporter bid $47,000 to throw the ball around with Tom Brady.
Watch: (here).
Boston Herald, MA
August 25, 2008

Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Steven Tyler was “Back in the Saddle” yesterday, not storming a stage with his legendary band Aerosmith, but straddling one of his custom-made Red Wing motorcycles for the first annual Boston Rock Ride For Africa.
Hundreds of humanitarian bikers followed the 60-year-old Marshfield superstar’s tailpipe on a 15-mile charity ride from Waltham to the Bank of America Pavilion on Boston’s waterfront to raise money for FORGE and Opportunity International, two charities dedicated to stamping out poverty and empowering struggling Africans to “Dream On.”
Boston Herald, MA
August 25, 2008
By Inside Track
” . . Aerosmith drummer Joey Kramer and legal eagle Frank Cimler backstage with Motley Crue at the Comcast Center . . . “
Boston Globe, MA
August 25, 2008
Steven Tyler led a posse of about 1,500 bikers on a Boston for Africa 2008 charity ride to the Bank of America Pavilion yesterday. Ernie and The Automatics were expected to perform afterward, along with Jeff “Skunk” Baxter, Johnny A, James Montgomery, and Mike Mangini. The Aeromsith frontman, and bandmate Joey Kramer, will also judge a Guitar Hero rock-out competition tonight at the Hard Rock Café. The two-day event benefits Foundation Rwanda, FORGE, and Opportunity International, which raise awareness about poverty and war in Africa.

















