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RIP Tom Petty

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by Steak Snabler, Oct 2, 2017.

  1. Dick Whitman

    Dick Whitman Well-Known Member

    I really hope that this was not overdose- or otherwise drug-related. But I fully expect to be disappointed.
     
    YankeeFan likes this.
  2. Captain_Kirk

    Captain_Kirk Well-Known Member

    Fantastic quote. As a child of the 70s, I get exactly what he's saying here.
     
    Double Down likes this.
  3. KJIM

    KJIM Well-Known Member

    Hometown paper coverage:
    Tom Petty delivered 'Southern accent' with a hard, smart edge
    Gainesville native and rock legend Tom Petty dies at 66
     
  4. Cosmo

    Cosmo Well-Known Member

    Been listening to his catalog front to back today at work. Some of the deeper cuts are just great. Much more expansive than I realized.
     
  5. Double Down

    Double Down Well-Known Member

    I've been wrestling with this for 24 hours, trying to figure out why this shook me in ways that Prince and Bowie and Cornell didn't. Petty wasn't my favorite artist. I realized when he died that I didn't even own a copy of Full Moon Fever, just Petty's Greatest Hits and Wildflowers. But because no one I knew found Petty objectionable, he was the soundtrack for my entire teenage years in ways that no other artist could touch. Tom Petty songs were about drinking beer in someone's basement, itching to go to a party where there might be girls. They were songs you played when you drove around town with nothing to do, songs you played while you worked manual labor jobs in the sweaty misery of the summer. No one who put Petty on the stereo could be considered uncool. They might not be cool, but never were they uncool. He was too much of an original. In Montana, where I grew up, people would roll their eyes if you put on Garth Brooks or Dr. Dre or even Pearl Jam, but if you controlled the stereo at a party and you put Full Moon Fever on, the cowboys, the jocks, the valley girls, the punks, they'd all be cool with it. My entire understanding of Los Angeles neighborhoods can be traced back to Free Fallin. He was Into The Great Wide Open when I was 13, he was You Don't Know How It Feels when I was 17, and he was Wildflowers when all my friends and I were blowing in different directions off to college, never to be the same again. When I think of Petty, I think about a time in my life when nothing was certain but everything was possible, and this weird, clever man was cocking his head sideways as he looked into the camera, telling stories about vampires and longing and disappointment. I had no idea how woven into my memories he was until, suddenly, he was gone.
     
  6. Huggy

    Huggy Well-Known Member

    This is so fucking great....

    [​IMG]
     
  7. Chef2

    Chef2 Well-Known Member

    Well said man.
     
    Double Down likes this.
  8. Deskgrunt50

    Deskgrunt50 Well-Known Member

    Damn. This got to me a little bit. Well done.
     
  9. Riptide

    Riptide Well-Known Member

    Imagine you're in the first or second row,
    center stage, at this concert. And then they do this song.

    There's Tom Petty up there. With the Heartbreakers behind him.
    And now you've got Stevie Nicks on the mic. And they're killing it on this song.

    In my mind, one of the best live concert clips.
    Everything you'd ever want from a rock band.
     
    Last edited: Oct 3, 2017
  10. Huggy

    Huggy Well-Known Member

    I remember hearing a bootleg where Petty brought Stevie out to do this and he said, "If you guys think we do a good job with this next one wait'll you hear Stevie sing it!"
     
  11. Riptide

    Riptide Well-Known Member

    Tom Petty's final interview: There was supposed to have been so much more

    No, this wasn’t supposed to be the end of the road for Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, even though the group’s namesake talked about what might cause that to happen — one day, perhaps, far down the line.

    “If one of us went down,” he said, “or if one of us died — God forbid — or got sick …,” letting his voice trail off at the thought of it.

    “We’re all older now,” he said softly. “Then we’d stop. I think that would be the end of it, if someone couldn’t do it.”

    Until then, he said, there would be no talk of any proscribed retirement day — for this singer, songwriter and guitarist, or his band of brothers.

    “On the back side of your 60s, most people aren’t working,” he said with an air of pride. “This keeps us young. I think it keeps me young.”

    The link above includes an hourlong audio clip of the interview, too.

    EDIT: Direct link to audio clip here ... Tom Petty's last interview
     
    Last edited: Oct 4, 2017
  12. Neutral Corner

    Neutral Corner Well-Known Member

    I hope that it turns out that he simply had a major coronary while he was alone. I mean, that's a shitty way to go, lying there with your heart muscle dying for lack of blood, and then your brain because your damaged heart isn't pumping adequately... but I'm so tired of musicians I loved dying due to drugs. I don't doubt that Tom did his share, he probably did more than my circle of friends and I have ever seen, but you have to hope that with age came wisdom and restraint.

    I don't suppose it really matters, he's dead and taken from us either way. I just think that I'd feel that much shittier about it, same as I did with Prince.
     
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