Top Pop Songs by Aerosmith
1. I Don't Want To Miss A Thing
2. Angel
3. Crazy
4. Pink
5. Love In An Elevator
6. Livin' On The Edge
7. Amazing
8. Dream On
9. Cryin'
10. Janie's Got A Gun
11. What It Takes
12. Jaded
13. Hole In My Soul
14. Walk This Way
15. Falling In Love (Is Hard On The Knees)
Top Rock Songs by Aerosmith
1. Livin' On The Edge
2. What It Takes
3. Cryin'
4. Angel
5. The Other Side
6. Janie's Got A Gun
7. Love In An Elevator
8. Deuces Are Wild
9. Amazing
10. Dude (Looks Like A Lady)
11. Eat The Rich
12. Blind Man
13. Rag Doll
14. Fever
15. Crazy
16. Falling In Love (Is Hard On The Knees)
17. Pink
18. Hole In My Soul
19. F.I.N.E.
20. Taste Of India
Biggest Classic Rock Songs
Dream On
Sweet Emotion
Walk This Way
Last Child
Same Old Song And Dance
Aerosmith was an influential guitar rock music group. Aerosmith was led by singer Steven Tyler, and guitarist Joe Perry. Joe Perry also performed in The Joe Perry Project. The greatest hit by Aerosmith in pop music was I Don't Want To Miss A Thing, the 1998top song of the year.
The 1976 Aerosmith song Dream On became an all time rock classic. In 1986, the group Run-D.M.C. remade the classic Aerosmith song Walk This Way. A few months later, Aerosmith returned to become more popular than ever, starting with the song Dude (Looks Like A Lady). Years later, the Eminem song Sing For The Moment was built on the Aerosmith song Dream On.
REMAKES by Aerosmith included,
in 1976, Big Ten Inch Record, done in 1952 by Bull Moose Jackson And His Buffalo Bearcats;
in 1978, Come Together, done in 1969 by The Beatles;
in 1980, Remember (Walking In The Sand), done in 1964 by The Shangri-Las;
in 1982, Cry Me A River, done in 1956 by Julie London;
in 1988, Rockin' Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu, done in 1957 by Huey Smith And The Clowns;
in 1990, Love Me Two Times, done in 1968 by The Doors;
in 1993, Eat The Rich, done in 1983 by Krokus; and,
in 2004, Baby Please Don't Go, a 1935 song by Big Joe Williams. Sort Aerosmith songs into Alphabetical order
Complete Weekly Music Chart Archives:
Blue Peak Numbers take you to the weekly pop chart since 1960
Red Peak Numbers take you to the weekly rock chart since 1980