Bob Dylan Pays Emotional Tribute To His Friend And Bandmate Tom Petty

he chief recording engineer on this new album was Shelly Yakus. Working for the studio, I was assigned to be Shelly's assistant engineer. My job was to be the liaison between the chief engineer, the producer and the musicians.

Every evening at about 7 p.m., the engineer, the band and producer Jimmy Iovine would show up and tell me which song they wanted to work on that night. I'd pull the tape from storage and load it on the 24-track tape machine. This tape would have much of the song already recorded, and the band might, that night, add a new guitar solo or do some backing vocals, adding more complexity to the record. Or they might replace a track such as the bass guitar or piano. As assistant engineer, my job was to keep track of all this information on "track logs."

Sometimes, the artist would do take after take, trying to improve upon his or her performance. It could be very stressful for the artists, and very tedious for me. One night the band came in and told me that we would be working on "Stop Dragging My Heart Around." In my head, I called it "Stop Dragging this Song Around," because I was so sick of working on this particular song after five straight days.

Iovine asked if there were any tracks open for a new vocal. I was confused because we had already recorded Petty's vocal track earlier in the week, and everyone loved the way it came out. But I checked my track notes, found an empty track and set up for the new vocals to be recorded.

As I returned to the control room, I saw another person I had not seen in any previous sessions. Pretty, with long blonde hair I assumed she was someone's girlfriend or wife, but she was looking over the lyric sheet. It took a second, but I recognized her. It was Stevie Nicks, from Fleetwood Mac.

Iovine was doing a juggling act. While working with Petty, he had also been working with Stevie for her first solo album. He was really burning the candles at both ends and more than once arrived to the studio exhausted.

Stevie was in search of songs for the record, and Iovine wanted to hear "Stop Dragging My Heart Around" with her voice in the lead vocal. That's why they wanted a blank track — we would record her voice on the song's previously take and listen back to see how the song sounded with her on lead vocal. Most likely, we would end up erasing that track if we needed it for another instrument later on.

She got in front of the mike, put on her headphones and I started the tape. For the next hour or so, she sang the song several different ways, putting emphasis on certain phrases and changing her voice a little here and there. At one point, she asked to hear Tom's original vocal softly in her headphones to guide her along and help her keep the phrasing correct.

Finally, everyone was satisfied, and Stevie came back into the control room to listen back to what she had just recorded. To be totally honest, when the tape played back the song with just her vocals, it sounded just wrong to me. I had gotten so used to hearing Tom's voice on the track that it was jarring to hear someone else singing it. As an engineer, this is actually a problem, listening to something over and over again, you can lose all objectivity. It's hard to accept changes once you have gotten used to something.

We played back the song a few more times, and Yakus, the engineer, started bringing back Tom's original vocal slowly with the fader and goofily dropped Stevie's voice down over the course of the song to make it sound kind of like a duet. It was both funny and horrible, but I didn't say anything because I didn't want to lose my job. He started mixing the vocals back and forth over different parts of the song. Sometimes Tom would sing the verse with Stevie on the chorus, or Stevie on the verse with Tom on the chorus.

Everyone enjoyed the funny mixing and blending of the two voices. Then Iovine, very seriously, told me, "Whatever you do, don't erase Stevie's track!" My final job as the assistant was to make a few simple cassette tapes — with Tom's voice both in and out of the blend — for the band and Stevie to take home and listen and put the master recording back into storage.

I remember thinking as I went home that it was kind of an interesting session. It was fun to work with Stevie Nicks. She was a pro from start to finish, and I was able to do something a little different that night. Then I forgot about it, as we continued working the next night with the Heartbreakers.

About a month later, I was driving when I heard a familiar song on the radio. "Holy Smokes, this is 'Stop Dragging My Heart Around!' " I recognized that organ riff at the start, along with a specific guitar part. However, as the vocal started, instead of hearing Petty's distinctive voice, I heard, instead, Stevie Nicks'. Then, as the song progressed, I heard a blend of Tom and Stevie. It sounded like they were in the same room and had sung a duet together. This was definitely not one of the mixes that engineer Shelly Yakus made back in the studio that night, but a completely new one.

Turns out Iovine had taken the tape with the tracks we had recorded, brought it into a different studio and had Yakus mix it and press it to vinyl, as was done with records back in those days. It had been released as a Stevie Nicks record — not a Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers one — and it launched her solo debut, "Bella Donna."

When I got to the studio after hearing it on the radio, everyone was talking about the decision to make it a Nicks song and not a Petty song. Apparently, the record label made that final decision, the song rushed into production and released early. It was not a surprise to Petty or Iovine, but since I was just an assistant who worked only for Sound City, I had no idea of the plans. At the time, I couldn't tell if Tom was OK with the decision, and it definitely was not my place to ask him.

"Stop Dragging My Heart Around" climbed the charts quickly, making it to No. 3, where it stayed for six weeks. I was still working with Petty during this period, and I can say this: Tom, who had yet to notch a top five single at that point in his career, was not happy that Stevie was getting all the credit for the song.

Many years later, a demo version of the song with Petty singing all the lyrics was released on his 1995 box set, "Playback." Now, that was the song I remembered liking.

are you saying YOU were the person in this story?
 
I suppose tribute is nice -but do we really want to hear Jason Aldean performing "I won't back down?"

no
 
Tom Petty’s progressive politics won’t be forgotten

Tom Petty himself was open about his political views. Petty did not constantly speak about his politics or use his politics to sell his music, but he never hid his fairly progressive political views. In his recent tour for the 40th anniversary of his band, Petty showed a number of photos of a diverse group of women while he sang the song, “American Girl.” And whether he intended to or not, Petty sent a message of support to transgender people by showing a photo of late transgender actress Alexis Arquette*hours after Trump sent out a tweet about banning transgender people on the military.

When Petty did speak out, he did not mince words. He called the war in Iraq “shameful,” and added, “The guy lied. And he continues to do so. I can’t understand why he’s just not run out on a rail.”

Petty once threatened to sue George W. Bush for using one of his songs, “I Won’t Back Down” for a campaign rally. He sent the presidential candidate a cease-and-desist letter.

In contrast, Petty appeared to be thrilled when President Barack Obama played the same song in 2012 at the Democratic National Convention.*Petty told Rolling Stone, “I got chills… They knew it would be OK. I’ve had a chance to meet the president and talk to him about the music he listens to.”

He wasn’t afraid to wade into emotionally charged controversies. When asked what his song,*“Playing Dumb,” was about, Petty said it related to sex abuse within the Catholic Church.*“If I was in a club, and I found out that there had been generations of people abusing children, and then that club was covering that up, I would quit the club,” Petty told Billboard in 2014.

Petty said that too often, Christians endorsed violence.*“I’ve nothing against defending yourself, but I don’t think, spiritually speaking, that there’s any conception of God that should be telling you to be violent,” Petty said.

This openness to learn new things may have helped Petty understand where he went wrong and change accordingly without any defensiveness. Two years ago, Petty told Rolling Stone that the marketing for his tour*“Southern Accents” in 1985, which featured a Confederate flag, was a “downright stupid thing to do.”

“People just need to think about how it looks to a black person. It’s just awful. It’s like how a swastika looks to a Jewish person,” Petty said.

snip

Petty’s political leanings were not a major feature of his music or his persona as a rock musician like some other artists of his generation. But he was often an ally to marginalized groups, such as survivors of sexual violence, and never hid his progressive views to appease anyone. His songs were as much about recognizing and processing one’s pain as they were about resilience. And unlike a plethora of famous men who believe stubbornness is strength, Petty could admit when he was wrong.

https://thinkprogress.org/tom-petty-05f4792a5d99/
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It’s going to be a while before we find out exactly what caused the death of legendary rocker Tom Petty. The LA County Coroner has deferred his case for more testing and we’ve got the reason why.

While those close to late rocker Tom Petty say he died at age 66 after suffering a full cardiac arrest on Oct. 2, the LA County Coroner’s office is going to take their time before officially naming a cause of death and are listing the case as deferred. “A ‘deferment’ is just a sexier way of saying that we’re waiting for test results to come back from the lab. Often times the family of the deceased will seek what is called a Deferred Certificate so that the body can be buried. In this case, lab results are still going through testing, the doctor still hasn’t signed off on the report and it still hasn’t gone through any kind of transcription,” LA County Coroner’s Office spokesman Ed Winter tells HollywoodLife.com. This means the death certificate can be issued and Tom’s body released to a mortuary so his family can plan burial services.
 
Petty: "No one has Christ more wrong than the Christians"

Farewell to a rock icon, a songwriter of fierce integrity, and a free thinker. I don't think I've been this bummed about a musician's passing since Jerry Garcia!

"Religion seems to me to be at the base of all wars," continues Petty, who was raised, unconvinced, among Southern Baptists. "I've nothing against defending yourself, but I don't think, spiritually speaking, that there's any conception of God that should be telling you to be violent. It seems to me that no one's got Christ more wrong than the Christians."

http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/6174237/tom-petty-playing-dumb-catholic-church
 
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