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

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Bob Dylan has shared an emotional tribute following the death of his friend and Traveling Wilburys bandmate Tom Petty.

Confirmation that Petty had died at the age of 66 came from Tony Dimitriades, manager of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, on behalf of the family on Monday.

"He suffered cardiac arrest at his home in Malibu in the early hours of this morning and was taken to UCLA Medical Center but could not be revived," Dimitriades wrote in the statement. "He died peacefully at 8:40 p.m. PT surrounded by family, his bandmates and friends."

Responding to the news, Dylan, who co-founded the Traveling Wilburys with Petty, George Harrison, Jeff Lynne and Roy Orbison in 1988, said it was "crushing".

"It's shocking, crushing news," the folk singer told Rolling Stone magazine."I thought the world of Tom. He was a great performer, full of the light, a friend, and I'll never forget him."

As initial reports of Petty's removal from life support surfaced, there was an outpouring of grief from the music world. Sheryl Crowe and Bryan Adams were some of the first to share their tributes to the late rock legend.

feel like today, the music truly died. Can't go see/hear music and be safe and one of the greats just passed.
 
Music is worth the risk


music has been a major mover in every good fight for rights.



get up stand up
 
I believe it was Dylan & Petty specifically who 'created' the Travelling Wilburys...very tragic for his passing while relatively so young...gone too soon.
 
The birth of the Traveling Wilburys was a happy accident. Warner Bros. Records’ International Department had asked that George Harrison come up with a B-side for “This Is Love,” a single from his Cloud Nine album. At the time it was customary to couple an A-side with a never-before-heard track, giving the single extra sales value.

This was mid-1988. Cloud Nine was just out. George, along with cowriter Jeff Lynne and their friends Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, and Roy Orbison, had been hanging out in Dylan’s studio. I suppose George figured that as long as his pals were on hand, why not use them to knock off this flipside?

A couple of days later George came by my office to play the new “B-side.” We went next door to A&R head Lenny Waronker’s office so he could hear it too. George played us “Handle With Care.” Our reaction was immediate. This was a song we knew could not be wasted on some B-side. Roy Orbison’s vocal was tremendous. I really loved the beautiful guitar figure that George played. The guys had really nailed it. Lenny and I stumbled over each others’ words, asking, “Can’t we somehow turn this into an album?” (I also had a suspicion that perhaps George had been hungering for another band experience.)

We urged him on. George felt the spontaneity of it, felt its driving force. He always had great instincts. Being as smart as he was he had a remarkable ability to pull people together. Think about The Concert For Bangladesh — only George Harrison could have made that happen.

Once the idea of a full, collaborative album was in front of us, George took over
The group was born: five guys with star stature in their own rights, but it was George who created this Wilbury environment where five stars could enjoy an ego-free collaboration. Everybody sang, everybody wrote, everybody produced — and had great fun doing so.
http://www.travelingwilburys.com/history
 
history-band-2.jpg
 
People were posting cell phone videos of the tour. his final performance was at the Hollywood Bowl.
He's waving his arms walking off stage...and that's the last we'll ever see of him.

 
Peter Wolf Describes the Magic of Tom Petty's Final Tour

J. Geils Band frontman recalls his 40-year friendship with the late singer-songwriter, which began and ended on tour togethe
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/n...es-the-magic-of-tom-pettys-final-tour-w506921
screen-shot-2017-10-03-at-44850-pm-02bb2a72-fb6c-4133-ad36-d3d8faf9a5a6.png


I first met Tom when he and the Heartbreakers were the opening act on a J. Geils tour back in 1977. It was a full circle honor for me to be his opening act on the 2017 Heartbreakers' 40th anniversary tour.

Tom and the band definitely had a vision early on of what they wanted to accomplish. Even back then, the audience seemed to understand immediately how special they were, and they received multiple well-deserved encores every night.

The last time I saw Tom was the final night of the recent tour I played with him. We were joking about the time he sent me the song "Don't Do Me Like That," He thought it would be a good song for the Geils band to do - unfortunately we never got around to recording it, so Tom put it on his album, and it became one of his many big hits ... and he certainly was right about that song!

More recently Tom was having hip trouble and in a lot of pain backstage during this summers' tour. He was driven to the performance area in a golf cart and slowly climbed the steps to the stage every night. But what was amazing... once he put on his guitar it seemed like it was a magic wand, taking away every ailment and pain that he was having... and night after night he kept the musical bar high.

That's what I admired about Tom; he worked very hard at everything he did and always with a deep passion and a great sense of dignity. He certainly carved his own way and always stayed one of the good guys!
 
Like so many others I am struggling to balance feelings of profound gratitude for the meaning, solace and magic Tom gave us as throughout our lives, the intention to send him out with the light of our love and the bottomless grief we feel. The world already feels so much colder and meaner without his spirit. Peace and strength to the Heartbreakers and to his family.

(fan club)
 
Tom Petty's last interview
his is not the Tom Petty story that I intended to write.

Though I was more than thrilled to catch up with Petty, whom I had interviewed before, I had no clue that this would turn out to be the last, for me and for him — that he would die just a few days later after suffering a massive heart attack at age 66.

This is not the way things were supposed to happen.

When I sat down with Petty in the outer room of the cozy but fully equipped recording studio at his home above Malibu beach, the idea was for him to reflect on the wildly successful 40th anniversary tour he and the Heartbreakers had wrapped less than 48 hours earlier at the end of three sold-out nights at the Hollywood Bowl.
.....
http://beta.latimes.com/entertainme...interview-20171004-story.html#nt=oft12aH-2gp2
 
Farewell My Friend by Roger McGuinn

Before there were books, music recorded our history.

Tom Petty was a historian. He didn't just write songs.
He wrote about the stories, people, and cultures of our times and then he put it all to music.

When he wrote a song, he flew up to the great wide open, caught an idea and would come free falling back to earth. Then he did it again. I know, I had the privilege of writing with him once.

His songs are movies for our imaginations and longer than 4 words. His every verse a diamond and every chorus gold.

P1010749.JPG

My last night playing with Tom. June 2016 NYC
 
Lots of great tributes this week. You realize that Petty played with almost everybody at some point.

My favorite memory is still of his Harrison tribute at the HOF. It was cool to see him & Prince on the same stage, and the latter just shredded that solo.
 
Lots of great tributes this week. You realize that Petty played with almost everybody at some point.

My favorite memory is still of his Harrison tribute at the HOF. It was cool to see him & Prince on the same stage, and the latter just shredded that solo.
40 years of a tight rock and roll band..

 
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.
 
I am betting it was a drug overdose.
cigarettes more likely..


Tom Petty Still Won't Back Down
http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/tom-petty-still-wont-back-down-20151020
he's not much of a party animal; last night he fell asleep watching A Hard Day's Night in bed. He doesn't have many vices: He's never been a big drinker ("I didn't like the taste or the buzz, and I can't stand being around drunks") and he never really got into cocaine ("I mean, I went through the Eighties like everybody, but cocaine was never a good look"). "I'm mostly just a reefer guy," he says. "It's a musical drug." He laughs at the idea of a prescription, though. "I've had a pipeline of marijuana since 1967."

Petty is a history buff and a fan of Thomas Jefferson. He says one of his favorite things to do whenever he's in Washington, D.C., is to "wait until it's really late, get stoned, go to the Jefferson Memorial, and just sit there and read the walls. I've done that a few times."

Actually, Petty does have one other bad habit, and that's cigarettes. He's been smoking since he was 17, and though he's down to less than a pack a day, he doesn't even bother pretending he's trying to quit. "I'm an addict, man," he says. "I'm a sick fuck. I don't light up in the car because people get upset. But I don't understand why I can't light up in a bar or park. I think that's yuppie shit."
 
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