Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
rhiannonsenchantedgarden · Rhiannon's Enchanted Garden - A place to discuss Stevie's career with fans!!
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Hear how Yahoo! Groups has changed the lives of others. Take me there.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Book Review: Conversations With Tom Petty by Paul Zollo   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #389 of 512 |
Book Review: Conversations With Tom Petty by Paul Zollo

Blogcritics
DJRadiohead
July 21, 2006 This, to be sure, is not an autobiography 'This, to be
sure, is not an autobiography,' Petty advises us in the foreword to
Conversations With Tom Petty. It is an important distinction. This
book compiles conversations, not interviews. Paul Zollo, in this
book, is not a journalist. He is a music fan and he is a Tom Petty
fan. The questions he asks tell us a lot about both men and reveal
a lot about this project. Zollo often drops compliments in his
questions. Conversations with Tom Petty is not written by an
objective journalist making informed, independent observations.
This is not a sordid tale of sex, drugs, and rock and roll. This is
Petty answering the questions he wants to answer in a friendly
environment.

This is not about Tom Petty, the man. Conversations is a listening
companion intended for the devoted fans who are more interested in
the songs Petty sang with Stevie Nicks than whether or not they did
blow (or anything else) together. It is an easy read because of the
setting and the Q&A structure of the book. This is two guys sitting
around, talking about music. There are no startling revelations,
yet there are plenty of interesting facts and details to be
learned.

That does not render the book useless or boring. Nearly every song
in Tom Petty's 30-year career is mentioned and discussed. The book
is divided into two halves. The first is a narrative that covers
his childhood (briefly) through the present. The second is an in-
depth discussion of each of his albums and most of the songs on
them. Zollo admits this approach might seem strange, as there is
some repetition between the two halves, but it does make for an easy
read. Readers will know more about the man by listening to him talk
about his music because the two are inexorably linked. It is when
he is talking about his music that you get to peer inside his mind.
For example, when he tries to explain his misunderstood The Last DJ
album: 'I wasn't talking specifically about music or radio
stations. I was talking about the state of the world, where our
moral head has gone. How the world has gotten meaner and meaner and
meaner, and almost applauds evil. That was what I was trying to
say.'

Petty is often described in interviews as being wary of the press.
He might not have said those same things in a traditional interview
if asked for his thoughts on the state of the world. By allowing
Petty to remain in his comfort zone, Zollo gets Petty to reveal
plenty.

One of the more interesting stories in the book concerns Petty's
Full Moon Fever album. Full Moon Fever was a huge hit for Petty
commercially and critically: 'I brought the record in, and they
didn't like it. Which had never happened to me. I was stunned.
They didn't like it. They didn't hear a single.

'They didn't want to release it. They wanted me to go away and come
up with a single. So I was pretty devastated. And I just kind of
put it on the back burner. And I was really depressed. Mike
[Campbell] and I cut that song, 'Alright For Now,' the kind of
lullaby that's on there. We did that without Jeff [Lynne]. Jeff
was out of town. And then Jeff came back and I said, 'They don't
want to put the record out.'

'For one thing, it was too short. It was only nine songs. And the
CD had become really popular. So they wanted it to be a little
longer. Then I cut the Byrds song, 'Feel A Whole Lot Better' just
to make the record a little longer… Then later on, I brought the
record back. And the regime had changed at MCA. And I brought
exactly the same record in. And they loved it.'

Petty fans know how absurd it is that a label executive could not
hear a single on Full Moon Fever. 'Free Fallin'' is one of Petty's
biggest hits and most popular songs. It is the first track on FMF.
In fact, the album opens as follows: 'Free Fallin'' 'I Won't Back
Down' 'Love is a Long Road' 'A Face in the Crowd' 'Runnin' Down a
Dream'

'Free Fallin,'' 'I Won't Back Down,' and 'Runnin' Down a Dream' all
got major airplay on radio and MTV and were bona fide hits. The
other two, ''A Face in the Crowd' and 'Love is a Long Road,' are
great album cuts that are fan favorites.

He also dispels the myth that 'American Girl,' from his first album,
is about the suicide of a young woman in Gainesville, Florida. Urban
legend. It's become a huge urban myth down in Florida. That's just
not at all true. The song has nothing to do with that. But the
story really gets around.

There are no scores settled, personal or professional. He spends
very little time discussing the band's fallout with original drummer
Stan Lynch, other than to say it happened, or the subsequent hiring
of Steve Ferrone. The famous battles between Petty and his record
labels are barely mentioned as are his first marriage and its
demise.

Despite the reluctance to discuss personal matters, there is a
chapter devoted to former bassist Howie Epstein. Epstein died of a
drug overdose in 2003. It is one of the instances where the
personal and the musical intersect. Petty would probably have
preferred not to talk about his friend's slow descent into an
addiction that took his life but is candid about it nonetheless. He
describes the last time he saw Epstein alive and his dismissal from
the band. Petty says he thinks his wife, Dana, is the one who took
the call he knew was going to one day come.

'He had a dog named Dingo, a German Shepherd, that he was very close
to. He had him for years and years and years. He was very tight
with the dog, he took him on tour with him, he wouldn't be apart
from this dog. And I heard, through the grapevine, that he had
broken up with Carlene [Cash], and that he was staying in New Mexico
full-time. And the dog died. And the next day Howie died.'

One of the real treats in Conversations is the preview of his new
album, Highway Companion. The finishing touches on both the book
and the album were happening at the same time and Zollo got to hear
some of the songs and discuss them with Petty. I cannot wait to
hear the new album and I know already I will wind up re-reading that
final chapter once I do.

There are plenty of stories not told in this book but what is here
is usually interesting and you will not have to dig hard to find
it. If you are a devoted fan, the hardcover price is worth it. I
had no advance warning that 2006 would be such a Tom Petty year for
me. I started a music column this year and never would have
expected the first installment to be a Petty album.

I have reviewed his new single and previewed his new album and will
certainly review it as soon as it is released. This book could not
have arrived at a better time for me. If you are a casual Petty
fan, you can wait for paperback but I wouldn't. After you read it,
you may find you're not so casual after all.

DJRadiohead is formerly an award-winning journalist and broadcaster.
His podcasts and writing can be found at DJRadiohead.com. He is a
Roving Editor at Blogcritics and the host of BC Radio.




Copyright © 2006 Blogcritics, All Rights Reserved.








Wed Jul 26, 2006 12:43 pm

rhiannon102_...
Offline Offline

Forward
Message #389 of 512 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

Book Review: Conversations With Tom Petty by Paul Zollo Blogcritics DJRadiohead July 21, 2006 This, to be sure, is not an autobiography 'This, to be sure, is...
rhiannon102_44420
rhiannon102_...
Offline
Jul 26, 2006
12:45 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help