He also shared the music video for his new single “Dogtooth,” which he self-directed.Ĭall Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale drops on Friday, March 31. He then proceeded to share the artwork for Call Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale, which features an animation of the rapper carrying luggage. “Some of those songs I really love, and knew they would never see the light of day, so I’ve decided to put a few of them out.” “ Call Me If You Get Lost was the first album I made with a lot of songs that didn’t make the final cut,” he wrote on Twitter. Additionally, he’s dropped a new single titled “Dogtooth.” ORIGINAL STORY (March 27, 2023): Tyler, The Creator has revealed he’s releasing Call Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale - the deluxe version of his previous album. Stream Call Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale below and watch the music video for “Wharf Talk” above. I have more country in me than people think.After announcing Call Me If You Get Lost: The Estate Sale earlier this week, Tyler, The Creator dropped two singles and music videos for “Dogtooth” and ” Sorry Not Sorry.” “I grew up in the woods of New Hampshire. “I think country is the new rock & roll,” he told Rolling Stone Country at last year’s CMA Awards. Joe Perry, his longtime guitar foil in the Boston band, has already released two solo albums, as well as his work with the Joe Perry Project, but the Big Machine release marks Tyler’s first ever solo album. It’s interesting to note that Tyler, a vocalist synonymous with rock, has chosen the country genre in which to spread his wings. I was like, ‘I have to play that thing,'” says Barlowe. “He said Johnny Depp had given it to him. The second song they wrote with Tyler is on the more rocking side, driven by a cigar-box guitar the 67-year-old singer brought to the studio. “It’s obviously not going to be traditional country or old-school country sounding, but he does want mandolin and a banjo in there, to change it up.” But he’s been talking about how he wants some of it to be organic,” says Barlowe. “Everything he sings is going to sound a little like Aerosmith, because he’s the voice. Barlowe describes one as “an old classic Aerosmith love ballad,” with him playing acoustic guitar and mandolin, and Tyler on piano. He and his brother Nathan, along with Barlowe’s fiancée Hillary Lindsey, have already written two songs with Tyler. Songwriter Cary Barlowe echoes Johnston’s thoughts. “I’ve been working with some fucking epic Nashville songwriters, getting my feet wet with the style and groove.” My earliest influences put me somewhere between the Everly Brothers and the Carter Family, and this project is all about me paying homage to my country roots,” Tyler says. “There was an immediate connection with Scott and Big Machine, and Nashville seems like the perfect segue for a solo project. So far he’s collaborated with writers like Paslay, Hillary Lindsey, Cary Barlowe and the Cadillac Three’s Jaren Johnston. While no specific release date or title has been announced, the album, set for release later this year, will feature songs that Tyler has already been writing and recording in Nashville over the past few months. Rolling Stone Country can exclusively confirm that the Aerosmith frontman has signed a deal with Dot Records, the legendary label that Scott Borchetta and his Big Machine Label Group revived last year, to release his debut solo album. After strutting onto the stage of the Grand Ole Opry during Eric Paslay’s performance last week and teasing his upcoming country album, Steven Tyler has made it official.
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