Hey, Donald Trump—pick another song for your presidential campaign!

That's the message that Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler wants the billionaire businessman to hear loud and clear, having sent a second cease-and-desist letter to Trump's campaign committee over the weekend to have the Republican presidential candidate stop using the song during his campaign trail.

According to CBS News, the letter informs the committee that Trump does "not have our client's permission to use 'Dream On' " or any of Tyler's music, reasoning it "gives the false impression that he is connected with or endorses Mr. Trump's presidential bid."

Ironically, Tyler is a registered Republican and even reportedly attended the first GOP debate this past August. Perhaps that's all the Aerosmith frontman needed to hear from Trump to know that he's not putting his support behind the brash businessman.

Still, Tyler's attorney Dina LaPolt told CBS News in a statement that the cease-and-desist letter isn't "political" nor a "personal issue with Mr. Trump," but one more of copyright and permission ... which clearly the rock star didn't give the Republican presidential candidate.

Let the deluge of sarcastic suggestions for Trump's new campaign song to hit the Internet any second now. But from the looks of things, it won't be the enthralling "Dream On" anymore.

Tyler's cease-and-desist letter came the same weekend in which Trump told CBS News's Face The Nation on Sunday that he feels "much better being armed" and if someone had been carrying a gun during the recent Umpqua Community College shooting in Oregon that "the result would've been better."

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