Best Of Tom Petty Rar

Best Of Tom Petty

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Tom Petty

Ask your average wannabe rock star whose career they'd most want to trade with, and they'll say. If they're smart, anyway. It might not be the most obvious pick, since at no point in his life was Petty ever the biggest rock star, nor the most iconic, the most acclaimed, the most influential or the most ostentatious. Rather, his was a career you could take home to Mom: Relatively void of dizzying highs or petrifying lows, but dependable and rock-solid, liked and respected by nearly all and vilified by precious few. 2) at age 66 after suffering cardiac arrest at his Los Angeles home. Petty released 10 albums between 1976 and 1999 and all of them were at least certified gold; his most recent, 2014's Hypnotic Eye, was the first Billboard 200-topper of his career.

He came up on '70s FM but still thrived in the '80s and '90s on MTV; he sold out arena shows until the day he died. (OK, until the day he died. Still pretty good.) His life as frictionless as his catalog -- he even kinda warned against assuming that it was in -- but his music never soured, and neither did his fans; Petty's ultimate legacy may be as proof that adult affability could be as magnetic a rock-star quality as animal charisma. And most importantly, he had the songs. They weren't songs that signified a ton about who you were or where you came from -- while peers like Billy Joel and Bruce Springsteen wore their home states like license plates, many of Petty's fans probably would have trouble picking out his Gainesville, Florida roots from a multiple-choice question -- and liking them meant nothing about your taste in music other than that you weren't violently opposed to rock music as a concept.

But they were songs that you lived for your entire life, songs whose casual, chiming perfection very unassumingly lodged in your heart forever. Tellingly, Petty's best-selling set by a mile remains 1993's Diamond-certified Greatest Hits; few of his singles had the largesse to be world-conquerors, but add 'em all up and just about every household in America needed to own at least one cassette copy. Here are the 20 best Tom Petty songs. Crank them up, give them life, breathe them in like oxygen.

'You Got Lucky' ( Long After Dark, 1982) A delectable moment of synth-pop swagger from the rarely malevolent Petty. 'Good love is hard to find/ You got lucky, babe, when I found you,' Petty taunts on the chorus, with the keys chiming in like backing singers to provide further shoulder-dusting. 'Ain't Love Strange' ( Let Me Up (I've Had Enough), 1987) A buried gem on Petty's only pre-'94 LP not to notch at least one song on his Greatest Hits, rollicking and twangy and red-blooded enough to have featured on a late-'80s Steve Earle album. Braun Falco Dermatology Pdf: Software. The harmonies and ringing guitars that lead the chorus back into the verse are also pure Fab Four; apparently Petty passed the audition because within a year. 'I Won't Back Down' ( Full Moon Fever, 1989) A melody so fundamental one of the biggest pop hits of this decade could, and a similarly straight-laced message that Petty's fanbase could take to heart: 'You can stand me up at the gates of hell/ But I won't back down.'

He sings it with a shrug rather than a sneer; Tom Petty never needed to be bossy to be the boss. 'Fault Lines' ( Hypnotic Eye, 2014) Tom Petty's rock relevance had inevitably waned by the 21st century, but the songs never really dried up -- 2014's Hypnotic Eye, now to stand as his final LP, was one of the best of his later years, with the alternately smoky and swampy 'Fault Lines' an obvious highlight. ' I've got a few of my own fault lines running under my life' as a chorus hoo is obviously peak Petty: hard-lived and tough-lucked, but still grinning through it. 'You Don't Know How It Feels' ( Wildflowers, 1994) Petty's final massive crossover hit, with a groove that out-saunters 'The Joker' and a sentiment that sways back and forth between supreme chill to existential angst with such wicked insouciance that of course the post-grunge era couldn't turn it down.

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