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The Great Wide Open
By Chris Willman
M Music & Musicians - September-October 2010

After a few years of looking back, Tom Petty is fired up about facing the future.
"I was born a rebel," Tom Petty once sang, and he wasn't kidding. As a certifiable legend of rock music who has sold tens of millions of album and filled countless arenas, he still takes a passionate stand about the things he believes in.

Take the environment, for example. Standing at the plate glass window of his Malibu beach house, he points out a spot where several dolphins are about to appear. "You'll see 'em break water between those two boats," he says, and that's just what they do. He was horrified by this summer's enormous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. "Doesn't that piss you off?" he says. "It's beyond belief." And he puts his money where his mouth is -- this cozy, cabin-style beach residence runs completely on solar power. "There's no electric bill," Petty notes with pride.

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Or you can get him talking about the subject of rock bands who record with the aid of a metronomic click track to stay in time. "Hearing a mistake in a record today would make me happy," he says. "I don't like computer drums and things like that. Music wasn't meant to be played that way. The human gives and takes in its rhythm. Maybe there's not that many people around who want to practice anymore."

Then there are the music business executives who used to complain to Petty, "I don't hear a single," as he noted in his 1991 hit "Into The Great Wide Open." That's something that did not concern him during the recording of Mojo, the 12th and latest studio album he has recorded with his backing band of almost 35 years, the Heartbreakers. "In those days, they always wanted a song that could promote the album," he recalls of his period as a consistent Top 40 pop hitmaker, an impressive run that lasted from the 1970s well into the 1990s. Petty cranked out one radio favorite after another -- with the Heartbreakers, as a solo act, and as a member of his much-beloved supergroup, the Traveling Wilburys. "I did that all my life -- go back and write another hit song for 'em," he says. "And that was fun and great, but we've grown up and don't have to do it."

But the thing that really gets under his skin is the thought of succumbing to the temptations of nostalgia. Mind you, over the last few years it was easy to mistake Petty and the Heartbreakers -- guitarist Mike Campbell, keyboardist Benmont Tench, bass player Ron Blair, multi-instrumentalist Scott Thurston and drummer Steve Ferrone -- for a "classic rock" act. There was last year's four-disc boxed set, The Live Anthology, culled from shows throughout the band's career. There was 2007's four-hour documentary, Runnin' Down a Dream, directed by Peter Bogdanovich. There was 2006's retrospective 30th anniversary tour, and the 2008 self-titled album by Mudcrutch, Petty's reunited pre-Heartbreakers group (which also included Campbell and Tench). And there was the 2008 Super Bowl halftime performance, during which the group stuck strictly to hits from the 1970s and '80s. "I think we've all had enough of that," Petty says with a chuckle. "So this was probably the end of celebrating our past for a while. They were all satisfying projects. But what's really interesting about this band is that it's still as good or better than it was, and we're still putting out good stuff."

Which brings us to Mojo, the first Heartbreakers album since 2002's poorly received The Last DJ. It's a stripped-down effort for which the group eschewed overdubbing and actively avoided its own familiar musical signatures. "There were a couple of songs that we would start playing and we'd get halfway through and look at each other and go, 'We've already covered this territory,'" Campbell says. "Because the Heartbreakers are so good, Tom can count a song off that we've never heard before and we can instantly make that sound like you hear on 'Refugee' or 'American Girl.' We do that instinctively. But we don't want to repeat ourselves." Instead, Petty and company elected to explore for the first time in the studio a style that they've been playing in rehearsal and in concert for many years. "The blues is paramount, and the Heartbreakers are particularly good at it," he says. "That's really where we have lived for a long time, off-camera. When we're playing for us, that's what we play." But Petty is careful not to describe Mojo as a blues album. "It's our warped way of making a blues record," Petty says, "and it comes out as something completely different."

On the album's centerpiece track, the seven-minute "First Flash of Freedom," Petty sings about the liberation of new experiences -- both the discoveries of a younger person and the ongoing revelations or someone with a long and rich history, someone very much like himself. "I think there's a constant comparison with things you first flashed on early in life," says Petty, who will turn 60 on Oct. 20. "I think you often hold those experiences up to things later in life. Some people spend their whole life trying to get back to that. And then some people are wise enough to know that was then, and this is now." We spoke to Petty about then, now, and the challenges of running down a brand new dream.

What are your hopes for this record?
I'd like people to notice that we're still doing things that are worth hearing. Very few can say that about a 35-year-old band. I want to keep moving. We've found a musical area where there's a lot to be mined. These are good days for the Heartbreakers. We're not looking back. All that was nice, but it's essential that there be new things. I do not want to ever get in that situation of only being appreciated for your past. That's not a good feeling. (laughs) This is a definite forward statement.

It's a more lighthearted record than usual.
Lighthearted, yeah. Well, you don't want to be real serious all the time. That really makes you a boring ass, doesn't it? (laughs) Nothing worse than some musician being really serious.

You've certainly done very serious albums.
Yeah, and I was probably a boring ass. I don't want to be too serious. I just want to be pure. I want it to move people rhythmatically, provoke them mentally or just make them feel good. Mostly I'm trying to get a song done. If it feels good, I offer it to the band and say, "What do you think?"

How do you balance the group with solo projects?
My guys aren't side musicians -- they are a group. It's always been about keeping these same people together and seeing what we can get out of it. At times I've had the urge to go away and make a record on my own. But [1994's solo credited] Wildflowers, for instance, I don't think is really a solo record. It started as a solo record and ended up with all of them on it [except drummer Stan Lynch, who left the band later that year]. So I can't get very far from them without wishing they were back. I still wouldn't want to play with anyone else. They're the band I want to be in.

How do you feel about The Last DJ?
I don't know that we were all happy with it in the end. I was being a bit more of a control freak with that album. In the studio, I'd come in with these really elaborate demos and say, "This is what I want." And it was frustrating for them because they didn't have much room to contribute a lot. They were mostly playing things that I had already sketched out. So I thought it really important in this record that we not do that.

What was recording Mojo like?
I've made a lot of production pieces, but I wanted something more immediate than that this time. No headphones, and we'd set up a semicircle and work the songs up there. I didn't make any demos. I just came in with my guitar and played it to them. If we came in at 2 in the afternoon, that track was done by 10 or 11.

Mike is very prominent on the record.
We wanted to get him up front and get the guitar right up load -- and he rose to the challenge. He tends to almost lay back, because he's so tasteful and tuneful. I wanted to push him up forward and say, "Look, get up there and rip, and don't worry about it. The guitar is going to be the second voice of this record." He used the same '59 Les Paul through the whole record. I liked the sound of it real early on, and said, "Let's just have the one guitar on this record for the lead guitar." I like having a sound in there that becomes your friend throughout the album, like another voice. I did that on [2006's Petty solo album] Highway Companion, too, where he only played slide guitar, and on Mudcrutch, where he used the pedal on the B-bender Telecaster. I've gotten more out of that idea on this record than I have on any of the other ones.

What were some of the other differences this time?
It was a lot of fun getting to play lead guitar. They let me play lead on "Running Man's Bible." And Scott Thurston's guitar playing is really good, where he and Mike play together in "First Flash of Freedom." That's a really long piece and they had to rehearse and rehearse and rehearse, but they did it really beautifully. It's an incredible thing. A lot of people have done the double guitars, and maybe that's a little of the Duane Allman-Dickey Betts idea. I mean, long before they were in the Allman Brothers Band, from when they were in the Escorts [Gregg and Duane Allman's early-1960s group]. I watched Gregg and Duane play when I was a little kid. Also, one thing I don't know if everyone's picked up about Mojo is that there's not a single note of harmony in the whole album -- something I did on purpose. It sounded too slick for the material. Now and then somebody would be sitting in the control room singing a harmony to something, and I'd go, "Ah, nope, can't do it."

Are you bothered if some fans don't want to hear the new material live?
I have a feeling that they'll stay in their seats and enjoy it, but I don't give a damn if everyone does to the bathroom. I'm not going to be just a song-and-dance man. I'm gonna play what I want to play. I know I should always give people a good dose of what they came to hear, because I'm not playing at the corner bar, and it's quite an effort to go into an arena and part and sit way up high and watch. But we also refused to become one of those groups that only live in the past. I can come out and play two hours of hits and everyone will be happy and it'll go great. But if I do that too much, I'm only feeding the nostalgia crowd. I love it when I see people and they play the hits, but I also want to see what they're doing at the moment.

Songs never become classics if they aren't played live.
If I had all this great new stuff in my back pocket and didn't pull it out, it would be criminal. If we don't do that, what are we? They've seen us play "American Girl" a hundred times. Golden oldies are great and it's lots of fun, but it adds up to nothing if you're not doing something new. I didn't mind doing that on the 30th anniversary tour. I looked at it like, "OK, we'll give 'em all the hits." But I don't feel that way now. It's wonderful to have that kind of admiration and loyalty from the fans, but it's also my job to keep the boat afloat and to keep exploring. If I'm going to keep myself engaged in this, it's what I've got to do. There's nothing wrong in being a "touring act." But if you're going to play the same material the rest of your life, it becomes a grim prospect. I've seen bands our age that gave up trying to create things. Maybe their heart's really somewhere else and they're working under a brand name so they can feed the babies. There's nothing to be ashamed of in that. But it's a lot more fun if you're still creating and getting better. We're all pretty well off. We don't have to work if we don't want. But we do want.

 


 

Man In The Middle
Mike Campbell, the lead guitarist and cofounder of the Heartbreakers, loved playing in a more blues-based style on Mojo. But he's aware that the B-word comes with baggage. "If you put a blues label on it, people think you're doing a Buddy Guy record or something, and it may scare them off," says Campbell. "It doesn't mean you're playing 'Stormy Monday' or a hackneyed, regurgitated, 12-bar, trying-to-be-B.B. King thing. That's not us. But we've injected some of that source into our music." And not for the first time. "'Breakdown' and 'Refugee' have bluesy guitar lines and a bluesy feeling here and there," he says. "But we never really explored it in depth. Anyways, the songs are as much rock as they are blues."

The change in the band's sound relied on simultaneously restricting and opening up Campbell's guitar playing. The restriction came in the form of the gear involved. For the first time in its career, the band switched from Vox to Fender amps, which Petty believes made a major difference. More importantly, Petty asked Campbell to stick to one guitar (with rare exceptions, like the pedal steel that pops up on lone ballad "No Reason to Cry") and switch up his trademark sound. "This album may alienate some people who are used to the jingle-jangle, Rickenbacker, anthem-type songs, which we've done quite a few of and we may do in the future," he says. "But the approach on this album basically grew from the '59 Les Paul sunburst guitar, which, because of the sound of it, lends itself to a bluesier type of music."

His modesty and tasteful dedication to serving the song have always made Campbell perhaps the only lead guitarist in history who consciously avoids playing long solos. "There's more solos and guitar licks on this record than probably in our whole catalog put together," says Campbell. "In 'Good Enough,' we got to the end of the take, and I did a couple or three or four rounds and thought 'OK, that's been a bit long." I looked up to Tom to see if he wanted to end the tune, and he's looking down getting into it, so I figured I'd just keep going, and that pushed me to carry it into an even higher level. Finally, after a few more rounds, I looked up and he said "OK, you can end now.' There was a lot of thinking on the floor."

 


 

The Last DJ
Bob Dylan may have stopped doing his Theme Time Radio Hour on satellite radio last year, but Tom Petty's five-year-old Sirius XM show, Buried Treasure, is still going strong. "Well, I started before he did," Petty says of his fellow Traveling Wilbury. "It's turned into a very real part of my life. I really do put the shows together and sequence it myself. And I don't play anything I haven't bought. I think that's a good rule of thumb." The show has given Petty something he was missing for a long time -- a good excuse to simply enjoy listening to music he loves. "All of us, as we get older, get more responsibilities, families," he says. "There's less time to sit down and really take in music. But I can close the door and say 'Whoops, working on the radio show!'" And he is bolstered by the feedback he gets from listeners who discover new sounds through the show. "I love when young people write me who had never heard Chuck Berry or something," he says. "And to know that a highlight or some people's week is tuning into a radio show -- I love that idea. It's a nice tradition that should be carried on. I hope I get to do it forever."