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Tom Petty News - Since 1999, The only place to find out what's new with Tom Petty!
October 31, 2005
Book Explores Petty's Area Roots

By DAVE SCHLENKER
The Gainesville Sun entertainment editor

What started out as a case study in songwriting - a sit-down chat on the craft with Tom Petty - turned into a nostalgic stroll through the streets and clubs of the singer's native Gainesville.

The Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Famer delves deep into his music, family and Gainesville roots in the book "Conversations With Tom Petty," which will be released Tuesday by Omnibus Press. In Q&A format, the book was written by music journalist Paul Zollo, who interviewed Petty for a little more than a year in the singer/songwriter's homes in Malibu and Malibu Beach.

"His idea was to do a book on songwriting, and I was interested in that," Petty told The Gainesville Sun. "But as we went along, it seemed necessary to add in some biographical material to understand where I was coming from. So I guess the book is kind of half and half - half biographical and half in-depth study of the songs and how they were written."

"So I don't know," Petty said, pausing before a slight laugh. "It's got a lot of nice pictures."

Four sets of pictures, to be exact - mostly stage shots and behind-the-scenes moments with Petty and The Heartbreakers. But there are gems from the early days: his first-grade picture, a photo of The Epics (Gainesville, 1966), a 1973 Gainesville Sun clipping on the band Mudcrutch.

The meat of the book, of course, is the detailed string of memories about an insurance salesman's son who hung out at Lipham's Music, met Elvis in Ocala, missed 42 days of school one year, graduated late from Gainesville High School and went on to lead a hugely successful rock band whose name adorns a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Among the book's notable nuggets:

  • Petty's grandparents fled to Florida from Georgia, after the grandfather killed a violent man angered about the couple's mixed marriage (Petty's grandfather was white, his grandmother was a full-blooded Cherokee Indian). This, Petty told Zollo, is the story his father told him as an adult.
  • Petty's father, Earl, was an avid hunter who often dragged young Tommy along: "Quail was OK," Petty recalled, "but eating a dove?"
  • Don Felder, who later became a member of The Eagles, taught Petty how to play piano at Lipham's Music, where the two worked. Bernie Leadon, who later played with The Eagles and The Flying Burrito Brothers, also worked at Lipham's, a store Petty called "the center of all activity in Gainesville."
  • Petty was fired as a grave digger for the city of Gainesville.
  • He met Heartbreakers' keyboardist Benmont Tench (the son of late Circuit Judge Benjamin M. Tench) at Lipham's Music, where Tench was parked at an organ and playing The Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" album - song by song, note for note.
  • "American Girl" is not about a suicidal leap off Beatty Towers at the University of Florida. "Urban legend," Petty told Zollo. "It's become a huge urban myth down in Florida."
  • Petty compared former Heartbreakers' drummer, and current songwriter, Stan Lynch to The Who's Keith Moon, calling him a "powerhouse on stage." Their strong personalities clashed, however, and Lynch left the band in 1994.
  • Petty's memories are often punctuated with laughter. The often-reserved Petty was relaxed, Zollo said, as the two talked over bottled Coca-Colas and, once, fresh chili served by Petty's wife, Dana.

    "Every time I came over, he had a great big smile on his face," Zollo said. "It was a great time. He was very happy. He's got Dana and his family, and he's also very happy professionally."

    In the book, Petty traces his path from Gainesville, where he left to shop his band Mudcrutch - door to door, tapes in hand - in Los Angeles. It was a rough road, one that required him to send his first wife, Jane, and their first daughter back to Gainesville while he continued to seek a record deal out West.

    He found one with fledgling Shelter Records; Mudcrutch, however, broke up soon thereafter, leaving Petty to ponder a solo project or find a new band.

    He wanted to stay with Mudcrutch guitarist Mike Campbell and, still armed with a record deal, convinced Tench's Gainesville band The Heartbreakers to join them. Petty, Campbell, Lynch, Tench and bassist Ron Blair recorded their self-titled album (with "Breakdown" and "American Girl") in 1976.

    That's right. TP & the HBs turn 30 next year, which, Petty said, was one reason he embarked on the book with Zollo.

    "I think the older you get, the more perspective you have," said Petty, who turned 55 on Oct. 20. "But then again, you have the problem of not really being able to remember it all. We'd sit down and talk. And then, eventually, Paul got enough for the book. It would have been nine volumes long, I guess, if we'd put it all in."

    The Q&A format allowed Petty to tell his story his way. But, Zollo said, Petty held little back, including details about his turbulent relationship with his father, a man - he told Zollo - who "didn't mind just popping you."

    Petty's candidness came as a surprise to Sadie Darnell, his first cousin and a well-known, recently retired captain with the Gainesville Police Department (Petty contends she is more famous than he is in Gainesville).

    Darnell and her twin sister, Norma Darnell, remain close with "Tommy." Their mother, Lottie, and Petty's late mother, Kitty, were sisters. Sadie Darnell recently read an advance copy of "Conversations" and said Zollo did a great job presenting the Tommy she and her sister know so well.

    "The writer portrayed the relaxed Tommy, the fun-loving Tommy, the prankster Tommy," she said. "It captured him in such a realistic way."

    And Sadie Darnell is not surprised about the book's nostalgic tone.

    While the rock star is content in scenic Malibu, he longs for the small-town South that often weaves through his music. A few years ago, the Darnell sisters visited Petty and his family in Malibu.

    There, she said, they watched a DVD a family member produced from old home movies shot in the '50s and '60s. Set to music that included Petty's solo ballads, the DVD showed Norma, Sadie, Tommy and, often, his younger brother, Bruce, at the beach, in front yards and racing along Gainesville's streets in a go-cart.

    One scene shows an Easter egg hunt. Happy kids scamper across the yard, as young Petty - with rolled-up sleeves and Elvis hair - stands next to his beloved mother. The music: Petty's 1985 bittersweet "Southern Accents."

    "For just a minute she was standing there with me," Petty's voice sings as his younger self stands next to his mother. "There's a dream I keep baring/Where my mama comes to me/And kneels down over by the window and says a prayer for me."

    Upon seeing the scene, the room fell still, Sadie Darnell said. The rock star in the Malibu mansion was genuinely overwhelmed.

    "It was just a really warm moment," she recalled. "It just felt right."

    The nostalgia is very real, she said.

    Indeed, Petty told The Sun, he has been away from his native land too long; he hasn't been back since his father's funeral in 1999.

    "It was very frustrating because I wanted to stay and visit," he recalled. "I remember a lot about Gainesville, such a lovely place to grow up. Just incredible growing up there. The music scene in the '60s was really exciting. And we didn't know it. I mean, as far as we knew, everywhere was like that."

    He paused, thinking back for a moment. "It was really special there," he added. "It was so great. Sometimes I have this fantasy of buying one of those houses by the Duck Pond and moving there. I loved it there. I really did. I think when we left, we were sick of it. We felt like we'd done everything we had wanted to do there 10 times, you know. We had outgrown it in a lot of ways.

    "But we miss it."


    October 28, 2005
    Conversations with Tom Petty
    Paul Zollo Book Tour

    Paul Zollo, author of Conversations with Tom Petty (Omnibus Press), is embarking on a multiple-city book tour this fall. At these “in stores,” Paul will be doing a reading from the book, signing copies, and meeting and mingling with fellow Tom Petty fans. Attendees will also have the chance to win a Fender electric guitar pre-autographed by Tom Petty as part of a unique contest taking place at each of the stores. Paul would love to have you come out, so tell your friends and consider yourself invited.

    HOLLYWOOD, CA

    November 11, 2005 7 pm
    Virgin Megastore
    Hollywood & Highland Center
    6801 Hollywood Blvd.
    Hollywood, CA 90028
    www.virginmega.com

    SANTA BARBARA, CA

    November 17, 2005 7:30pm
    Borders Books and Music #129
    900 State Street
    Santa Barbara, CA 93101
    www.borders.com

    CHICAGO, IL

    November 20, 2005 2pm
    Borders Books and Music #495
    1 N. La Grange Road
    LaGrange, IL 60525
    www.borders.com

    November 22, 2005 at 7 pm
    The Book Stall
    811 Elm Street Winnetka, IL 60093
    www.thebookstall.com
    *no autographed guitar available at this event, sorry!

    NEW YORK, NY

    November 29, 2005 7 pm
    Virgin Megastore Union Square
    52 E. 14th Street
    New York NY 10003
    www.virginmega.com

    BOSTON, MA

    Thursday, December 1, 2005 6 pm
    Borders Books and Music #120
    10-24 School Street
    Boston, MA 02108
    www.borders.com


    October 24, 2005
    Conversations with Tom Petty
    I just got this invitation from the Author of Conversations With Tom Petty. Paul's a great guy and if you haven't bought the book yet, uh, what's your problem? Honestly, in my reply to Paul's invitation, after saying "What, no plane ticket?", I told Paul how I thoroughly enjoyed the read and I really appreciated his writing style; just so honest and open. Much better than my style! (insert laughter here) Although I think I might have just used a semi-colon correctly.

    Don't worry if you can't make it to the LA book signing, Paul said he would get the dates for his national tour to me as soon as they are finalized!

    Hope everyone is doing well! And consider yourselves INVITED!

    Hello!

    You are cordially invited to join me for a celebration of my new book, Conversations with Tom Petty, and a reading from and signing of that book, on Friday night , November 11th, at 7 pm at the new Virgin Megastore at the Hollywood-Highland complex in beautiful downtown Hollywood.

    The Virgin Megastore is at 6801 Hollywood Boulevard, next to the Kodak Theater, at the intersection of Hollywood & Highland. (From the valley, take the 101 and exit at Highland.) Parking, which can be validated inside the store, is off of Highland, just north of Hollywood Blvd., next to the hotel. For more info on the store, call 323-769-8520

    An electric guitar signed by Mr. Petty will be awarded to one lucky recipient at the event.

    Tom Petty has long been seen as one of the great songwriters of American rock ‘n’ roll, as well as one of the key standard bearers of integrity in the music business. Conversations With Tom Petty is the first authorized book to focus solely on the life and work of the man responsible for some of the most memorable rock anthems of our generation.

    He and his band were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002, and he was recently awarded with the Century Award from Billboard Magazine for 2005. His work with Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, as well as his solo albums and those with the Traveling Wilburys, has been critically acclaimed the world over. Tom and the band have sold more than 50-million albums and earned numerous Platinum-status awards from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), as well as Grammys, MTV Awards, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, and many other honors and awards.

    Author Paul Zollo conducted a series of in-depth discussions with Mr.Petty about his career, with special focus on his songwriting. The conversations are reprinted in Tom’s own words.

    Some comments from recent reviews:

    “The conversations are so intimate at times that you feel that you’re eavesdropping from the next table at a café.”- David McPherson, American Songwriter

    “His Southern gentleman charm comes right through on the page - smooth, like Jack Daniel's. Petty is always an eloquent storyteller, whether in song or on the printed page.” -Robert Matheu, CREEM

    “…overall the book is successful because the notoriously media-wary Petty responds to Zollo’s almost obsessive knowledge about his life, career and craft with articulate and intelligent answers that even nonfans can enjoy.” –Publisher’s Weekly

    “Just like Petty's songs, his life narrative grabs you and doesn't let you go until he's finished. An engaging read.”- -Anne Freeman, Music Dish.com

    Book Celebration, signing and reading, and the launch of a national tour:

    Virgin Megastore at Hollywood-Highland * 6801 Hollywood Boulevard

    Friday night, November 11th, 2005 * 7 pm * Admission is free

    For more information on the book, the author, how to order it, and current reviews, please check out ConversationswithTomPetty.com


    October 20, 2005

    Happy 55th Birthday
    Tom Petty!!!

    Thanks for the tunes!


    October 13, 2005
    Tom Petty to receive Billboard Century Award

    Tom Petty presented the inaugural Billboard Century Award in 1992 to George Harrison. Now it is Petty's turn to receive the honor.

    The Century Award, Billboard's highest honor for creative achievement, will be presented to Petty Dec. 6 during the Billboard Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. The awards will be telecast live on Fox.

    "Tom Petty is one of the true great singer/songwriters," Billboard co-executive editor Tamara Conniff says. "Petty's songs and lyrics go to the root of the American dream. For over 30 years, Petty has been a rock icon who continues to inspire new generations of artists. We are honored to present him with the 2005 Century Award."

    At 54, Petty shows no signs of slowing down. With his longtime band, the Heartbreakers, Petty just completed a North American tour, drawing more than 550,000 fans to the 36 shows reported to Billboard Boxscore.

    "This award comes at a particularly nice time as the Heartbreakers and I go into the 30th year of our career," Petty says. "I'm very honored that Billboard has acknowledged me with this award."

    Petty is wrapping up his third solo album, "Highway Companion," due in the spring. While sources say he has been in discussions with Sanctuary Records, there is no official word on a new label home. He has previously recorded for Shelter, Backstreet/MCA and Warner Bros.

    In the meantime, Petty has four songs in Cameron Crowe's new movie, "Elizabethtown," and on the accompanying soundtrack, which came out Sept. 13 via RCA.

    Influenced by '50s rock and the British bands of the '60s, Petty and the Heartbreakers crafted their own brand of rock'n'roll, generating such hits as "American Girl," "Breakdown," "Don't Do Me Like That," "Refugee," "The Waiting," "You Got Lucky" and "Don't Come Around Here No More."

    All told, the Heartbreakers' albums have sold more than 50 million copies worldwide, including their top-selling "Greatest Hits," which has been certified by the Recording Industry Association of America for U.S. shipments of more than 10 million units. The group was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002.

    Petty, a four-time Grammy Award winner, has interspersed Heartbreakers projects with two well-received solo releases and a pair of albums with supergroup the Traveling Wilburys, which included his musical heroes Harrison, Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison and Jeff Lynne.

    The Century Award was created by the late Billboard editor in chief Timothy White and former publisher Howard Lander. In addition to Harrison, it has been presented to Buddy Guy, Billy Joel, Joni Mitchell, Carlos Santana, Chet Atkins, James Taylor, Emmylou Harris, Randy Newman, John Mellencamp, Annie Lennox, Sting and Stevie Wonder.

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