In the early 1980s, Collins was the manager for
the Joe Perry Project, the solo project created by guitarist
Joe Perry, who left
Aerosmith in 1979. Collins orchestrated the reformation of the original Aerosmith, engineering an intervention with Aerosmith members that led them to become clean and sober. Guitarists Joe Perry and
Brad Whitford agreed to rejoin the band in April 1984, and it was officially reformed in May 1984 with Collins as their manager. In mid-1984, after every major record label passed on signing them, Collins and music attorney Brian Rohan inspired
John Kalodner to sign Aerosmith to
Geffen Records. The band toured extensively and in 1985 recorded
Done with Mirrors. The album, however, was not a success. The band did not attract mainstream publicity, and the band members were having addiction relapses. Collins and his team, with the help of Dr. Louis Cox of New York City, orchestrated a drug and alcohol intervention with lead singer
Steven Tyler. He successfully completed a drug rehabilitation program at the Caron Foundation in Pennsylvania. Shortly thereafter, the rest of the band followed suit. During this time, Collins was instrumental in getting Aerosmith's agreement to have Tyler and Perry collaborate with
Run-DMC on their cover of Aerosmith's "
Walk This Way". The song and video brought Aerosmith renewed attention and publicity. By 1987, all the Aerosmith members were clean and the band released
Permanent Vacation. Kalodner and Collins also had forged a creative partnership, enlisting outside songwriters and producers to work and tour with the band, including
Guns N' Roses. In the seven years between 1987 and 1994, the band released three albums and a compilation:
Permanent Vacation,
Pump,
Get a Grip and
Big Ones. Collectively, the albums sold 23 million copies in the United States, and Aerosmith won three
Grammy awards and numerous
Video Music Awards. At the end of 1994, the 18-month
Get a Grip Tour concluded, and the band wanted to take an extensive break before recording its next
Columbia Records album,
Nine Lives. Columbia, however, had a substantial investment in the band and did not want the record delayed. Executives pressured Collins and the band for a faster release. Collins and his team created structure for the band to more timely meet their contractual obligation, but the band members did not like it. Recording for Aerosmith was a long process, often causing contention among the bandmates. In the mid-1990s, Tyler and Perry were working with producer and songwriter
Glen Ballard, writing, recording, and rehearsing songs, often in sessions in Miami, Florida. This, however, was not unusual, as the two often wrote together and brought songs back to the band. Nonetheless, Columbia executives felt that, since Tyler and Perry were working independently with Ballard and the entire band would not be working together for months at a time, Aerosmith could break up. Drummer Joey Kramer also experienced health issues during pre-production. Columbia was afraid that Collins could not get the band to meet its commitments. The situation created significant tension, and Aerosmith fired Collins in July 1996. ==Life After Aerosmith==