Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tom Petty remembered as a rock classicist

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — Given the leather jacket and sneer Tom Petty wore on the cover of his 1976 debut, many people assumed he was one of those cheeky punks bent on tearing down the walls of rock ‘n’ roll.

He wasn’t. It’s not that Petty and his band, the Heartbreak­ers, didn’t have their share of energy and attitude. But the kid from Gainesvill­e, Fla., was a rock classicist to the core, and he built a body of work to stand with his heroes.

That debut contained songs that stood the test of time, the snaky “Breakdown” and “American Girl,” which so echoed the Byrds it confused that band’s leader. “When did I record that?” Roger McGuinn recalled thinking when he first heard it.

Only a week before his death Monday night after suffering cardiac arrest, Petty and the Heartbreak­ers finished a triumphant 40th anniversar­y tour in his adopted Southern California home. His sturdy compositio­ns built a discograph­y so strong he couldn’t get to all of his hits. “The Waiting,” “Listen to Her Heart,” “Here Comes My Girl,” “Refugee,” “You Got Lucky,” “Don’t Do Me Like That,” “Even the Losers,” “Don’t Come Around Here No More.” And so on. All are fist-pumping favorites.

It was melodic rock ‘n’ roll built with the solid structures of his favorites from the 1960s. Petty had an impish grin and playful drawl, and in concert he raised his arms to direct both his band and the thousands of fans singing along from the audience.

“‘Rock and roll star’ is probably the purest manifestat­ion of the American dream,” Petty said upon his 2002 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. “It’s a blessing beyond belief.”

As Petty and his band performed “Mary Jane’s Last Dance” and “American Girl” to the well-heeled audience, his daughters stood up and danced.

The Heartbreak­ers stood with Bruce Springstee­n’s E Street Band as one of the alltime great rock backup bands. Petty wouldn’t give ground: he added an expletive to his declaratio­n on that night that the Heartbreak­ers weren’t just one of America’s best bands, they were THE best.

Still, two key periods of

his career came without the Heartbreak­ers.

“Full Moon Fever,” Petty’s first solo album in 1989, stands as the apex of his career. Working with producer Jeff Lynne, Petty fashioned a cleaner sound and created the classics “Runnin’ Down a Dream,” ”I Won’t Back Down” and, most indelibly, “Free Fallin’.”

Petty was also a member of the temporary supergroup, the Traveling Wilburys, with George Harrison, Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Lynne. Pulled together by Harrison to record a B-side to a single, “Handle With Care,” they soon realized the song, and their sound, was too good to bury. It felt like a night at a Hollywood

party, a bunch of rock legends break out the guitars, pour a few drinks, and maybe a few more, and trade lines with each other.

“It was a gift I was given and what it means I don’t know,” Petty said in a 2009 interview with The Associated Press. “Johnny Cash once told me, he said, ‘it was a noble job.’ And I said, ‘Really?’ And he said, ‘Well, it makes a lot of people happy.’ … It does. It makes a lot of people happy. You can lose sight of that. People come up to me on the street and tell me how some song played a role in their life or how it got them through a hard time or this and that and I just think, ‘Damn, that’s what it is about.’”

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Singer Tom Petty arrives at the world premiere of the documentar­y “Runnin’ Down a Dream: Tom Petty and the Heartbreak­ers” in Burbank, Calif., in 2005. Petty died Monday at age 66.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Singer Tom Petty arrives at the world premiere of the documentar­y “Runnin’ Down a Dream: Tom Petty and the Heartbreak­ers” in Burbank, Calif., in 2005. Petty died Monday at age 66.

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