Brad, I saw you in the pits looking at Dario's Guitar Hero: Aerosmith car. You've been to a race or two and have a special collection of vehicles—is there one that you prize more than the others?Brad Whitford:
They're like my music: I like all types of music, I like all types of
vehicles. I have some European cars and I have some American cars. I’m
not a snob when it comes to that. One day I might be driving a '69
Camaro and the next day I might be driving a '07 Forrester.
OK, so Guitar Hero: Aerosmith—what does it mean for this Hall of Fame rock band to now have this kind of platform for its music?
Dario Franchitti: First of all, I have
Guitar Hero
because everybody loves the game. You see the amount of drivers out
there; Jimmie Johnson’s out there getting beaten by his wife in
Guitar Hero
right now. All the guys would go back to the buses and have little
tournaments because this is where we all live for four days a week. To
be already playing the game and then have the opportunity to drive
their car, it’s a reaction I haven’t ever seen by other people.
BW:
There are so many fans of this game. It is just a real phenomenon, and
it’s great that Aerosmith is part of it. We had a history of good
fortune and this is just another page of that good fortune for us.
Why are people so bananas for these games?
Charles Huang:
Music needed a shot in the arm. There hasn’t been anything new since,
arguably, the music video. You start off listening to music, and we’ve
done that for decades. Then music videos came out, now you can watch
music. What we’ve done is given people that third dimension, so now you
can interact with the music itself. In an era where the record industry
is having trouble selling CDs and music downloads, in the first seven
months of
Guitar Hero 3,
we’ve sold 16 million song downloads. When you give consumers a
different experience with music, they are willing to pay for it.
DF:
It’s like any game: you can do things that you would not normally be
able to do. Years ago, I broke my back in a bike accident, so I was
immobilized for a month or two. I just laid in front of a 12-foot
screen in a recliner with a body brace on and played
Tiger Woods Golf. Then I got my brace off and went golfing—I was pissed off that I couldn’t drive the ball 325 yards with spin on it.
Isn’t it weird opening up the game and seeing yourself there? I open up home videos and I don’t even see myself in them. BW:
I was all like, "Can you fix my hair there?" or "Can you make me a
little bit younger?" It's not like watching yourself on a video saying,
"Oh geez, I should have shaved today" or, "Man, I can’t believe I’m
getting a pimple on my nose." It’s pretty cool. The details are
incredible.
OK, cutting the crap, which Aerosmith song has gotten the most guys laid?BW: I
don’t know about myself, but we play these concerts and we see certain
songs, like “I Don’t Wanna Miss a Thing,” and people are suddenly
making out. It’s like whoa. People out there giving each other rings.
It is amazing how people get really attached to certain types of music.
It coincides with things that happened in your life and it stays with
you.
CH: If I had to pick one, I would probably say "Sweet Emotion." Somehow that riff—yeah, that’s what I’d say.
Do you think some "Sweet Emotion" can happen while playing Guitar Hero: Aerosmith?BW: You never know. Could be some X-rated game playing going on there.
All images courtesy of Getty.