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Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Chapel Hill, North Carolina, September 13th, 1989 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Chapel Hill, North Carolina, September 13th, 1989 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)
  • Title: Chapel Hill, North Carolina, September 13th, 1989 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: DMG
  • Genre: Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 1:15:09
  • Total Size: 492 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Intro (Live) (04:22)
2. Bye Bye Johnny (Live) (05:00)
3. Damaged You've Done (Live) (05:09)
4. Breakdown (Live) (05:07)
5. Free Fallin' (Live) (05:45)
6. The Waiting (Live) (02:40)
7. Bermong Boogie (Live) (08:29)
8. Don't Come Around Here No More (Live) (05:07)
9. Southern Accents (Live) (04:19)
10. Even the Losers (Live) (00:37)
11. Listen to the Heart (Live) (02:04)
12. A Face in the Crowd (Live) (04:15)
13. Something Big (Live) (04:46)
14. I Won't Back Down (Live) (03:05)
15. I Need to Know (Live) (02:22)
16. Refugee (Live) (05:32)
17. Running Down a Dream (Live) (06:21)

Tom Petty straddled the divide separating classic rock and new wave, revitalizing and reinvigorating the big jangle of the Byrds and the garage rock roar of the Rolling Stones with his earliest records with the Heartbreakers in the late 1970s. Over the next decades, Petty expanded and refined this blend, almost always with guitarist Mike Campbell and keyboardist Benmont Tench -- the musicians who had played with him since the early '70s, when they all were in the rambling country-rock outfit Mudcrutch -- by his side. The consistency in personnel and Petty's allegiance to the sounds of the '60s did mean his music veered toward classic rock, a perception that tended to obscure the variety within his body of work and how he seemed like a bit of a punk when he released his first album with the Heartbreakers in 1976. The tough, lean sound of Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers was in the same back-to-basics ballpark of the Ramones, and its rawness was evident in its signature single "American Girl," a rock & roll standard that didn't come close to the charts in 1977. Petty didn't land a big hit until he teamed up with producer Jimmy Iovine in 1979 for Damn the Torpedoes, a sleek, streamlined arena rock album that generated smashes in "Don't Do Me Like That" and "Refugee." From there, Petty & the Heartbreakers built up a substantial catalog, one that was rooted in rock tradition but flexible enough to accommodate detours into MTV stardom, concept albums, and slick experimentalism, not to mention their leader's occasional solo foray. Petty's solo albums -- the ornate Jeff Lynne-produced Full Moon Fever and the homey Wildflowers, recorded with Rick Rubin -- were two of his biggest records, but he remained a band guy at heart, sticking with the Heartbreakers in the studio and on the road from the mid-'90s through the mid-2010s. The band celebrated their longevity with a 40th Anniversary Tour in 2017, at the end of which Petty tragically died from an accidental drug overdose. His passing helped put in perspective how he was one of the greatest rockers and singer/songwriters of his time, amassing a body of work that managed to sound simultaneously timeless and fresh.



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