Amazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken, brilliantly understated way that's rock & roll perfect! If you understand the alchemist genius that transmutes such humble metal into gold, you're ready to curl up with 14 songs of near-similar standing. Petty and the Heartbreakers have succeeded in making an album that's stunning in its simplicity yet as carefully ornate and wondrous as a stained-glass window. Indeed, renaissance might be an appropriate tag for the reborn Petty, except that he's never really gone away. Like that "Room at the Top" bridge, he's always been lurking around the corner, waiting to surprise you when the time is right. --Tom Lanham
Product Description
Echo, the much anticipated new album from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, is 1999's first major rock release - and the last great rock album of the millennium. Few other artists can match the record of commercial success alongside creative growth notched by one of rock's premiere bands. For 20 years, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers have earned platinum albums, critical acclaim and hit singles. Certified Gold by the RIAA. (7/99)
Review
Echo puts the Heartbreakers back where they belong: in the garage and in front of the amplifier stacks -- Rolling Stone
For all Mr. Petty's musical debts, his songs are personalized. His voice--strangulated, unpretty and emotionally reticent--fights the music's dexterity, and his lyrics make him a perpetual outsider, a lonely underdog. -- New York Times
No tape loops, drum programs or other studio gimmickry here; just Petty's trademark power chords and wry story songs. -- People, ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCDAmazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken, brilliantly understated way that's rock & roll perfect! If you understand the alchemist genius that transmutes such humble metal into gold, you're ready to curl up with 14 songs of near-similar standing. Petty and the Heartbreakers have succeeded in making an album that's stunning in its simplicity yet as carefully ornate and wondrous as a stained-glass window. Indeed, renaissance might be an appropriate tag for the reborn Petty, except that he's never really gone away. Like that "Room at the Top" bridge, he's always been lurking around the corner, waiting to surprise you when the time is right. --Tom Lanham
Product Description
Echo, the much anticipated new album from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, is 1999's first major rock release - and the last great rock album of the millennium. Few other artists can match the record of commercial success alongside creative growth notched by one of rock's premiere bands. For 20 years, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers have earned platinum albums, critical acclaim and hit singles. Certified Gold by the RIAA. (7/99)
Review
Echo puts the Heartbreakers back where they belong: in the garage and in front of the amplifier stacks -- Rolling Stone
For all Mr. Petty's musical debts, his songs are personalized. His voice--strangulated, unpretty and emotionally reticent--fights the music's dexterity, and his lyrics make him a perpetual outsider, a lonely underdog. -- New York Times
No tape loops, drum programs or other studio gimmickry here; just Petty's trademark power chords and wry story songs. -- People, ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCD , ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCD
Amazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken brilliantly understated way tha...
Free Shipping over $50
Free Returns Within 30 days
Description
Amazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken, brilliantly understated way that's rock & roll perfect! If you understand the alchemist genius that transmutes such humble metal into gold, you're ready to curl up with 14 songs of near-similar standing. Petty and the Heartbreakers have succeeded in making an album that's stunning in its simplicity yet as carefully ornate and wondrous as a stained-glass window. Indeed, renaissance might be an appropriate tag for the reborn Petty, except that he's never really gone away. Like that "Room at the Top" bridge, he's always been lurking around the corner, waiting to surprise you when the time is right. --Tom Lanham
Product Description
Echo, the much anticipated new album from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, is 1999's first major rock release - and the last great rock album of the millennium. Few other artists can match the record of commercial success alongside creative growth notched by one of rock's premiere bands. For 20 years, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers have earned platinum albums, critical acclaim and hit singles. Certified Gold by the RIAA. (7/99)
Review
Echo puts the Heartbreakers back where they belong: in the garage and in front of the amplifier stacks -- Rolling Stone
For all Mr. Petty's musical debts, his songs are personalized. His voice--strangulated, unpretty and emotionally reticent--fights the music's dexterity, and his lyrics make him a perpetual outsider, a lonely underdog. -- New York Times
No tape loops, drum programs or other studio gimmickry here; just Petty's trademark power chords and wry story songs. -- People, ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCDAmazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken, brilliantly understated way that's rock & roll perfect! If you understand the alchemist genius that transmutes such humble metal into gold, you're ready to curl up with 14 songs of near-similar standing. Petty and the Heartbreakers have succeeded in making an album that's stunning in its simplicity yet as carefully ornate and wondrous as a stained-glass window. Indeed, renaissance might be an appropriate tag for the reborn Petty, except that he's never really gone away. Like that "Room at the Top" bridge, he's always been lurking around the corner, waiting to surprise you when the time is right. --Tom Lanham
Product Description
Echo, the much anticipated new album from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, is 1999's first major rock release - and the last great rock album of the millennium. Few other artists can match the record of commercial success alongside creative growth notched by one of rock's premiere bands. For 20 years, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers have earned platinum albums, critical acclaim and hit singles. Certified Gold by the RIAA. (7/99)
Review
Echo puts the Heartbreakers back where they belong: in the garage and in front of the amplifier stacks -- Rolling Stone
For all Mr. Petty's musical debts, his songs are personalized. His voice--strangulated, unpretty and emotionally reticent--fights the music's dexterity, and his lyrics make him a perpetual outsider, a lonely underdog. -- New York Times
No tape loops, drum programs or other studio gimmickry here; just Petty's trademark power chords and wry story songs. -- People, ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCD , ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCD
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken, brilliantly understated way that's rock & roll perfect! If you understand the alchemist genius that transmutes such humble metal into gold, you're ready to curl up with 14 songs of near-similar standing. Petty and the Heartbreakers have succeeded in making an album that's stunning in its simplicity yet as carefully ornate and wondrous as a stained-glass window. Indeed, renaissance might be an appropriate tag for the reborn Petty, except that he's never really gone away. Like that "Room at the Top" bridge, he's always been lurking around the corner, waiting to surprise you when the time is right. --Tom Lanham
Product Description
Echo, the much anticipated new album from Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, is 1999's first major rock release - and the last great rock album of the millennium. Few other artists can match the record of commercial success alongside creative growth notched by one of rock's premiere bands. For 20 years, Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers have earned platinum albums, critical acclaim and hit singles. Certified Gold by the RIAA. (7/99)
Review
Echo puts the Heartbreakers back where they belong: in the garage and in front of the amplifier stacks -- Rolling Stone
For all Mr. Petty's musical debts, his songs are personalized. His voice--strangulated, unpretty and emotionally reticent--fights the music's dexterity, and his lyrics make him a perpetual outsider, a lonely underdog. -- New York Times
No tape loops, drum programs or other studio gimmickry here; just Petty's trademark power chords and wry story songs. -- People, ISBN13: B00000IFWE ISBN10: B00000IFWE Material Type: audioCD
Amazon.com
Just a few bars into song 1, "Room at the Top," and you know you're in the capable hands of a master songwriter. A mellow chorus wafts by, whispered in Petty's patented Byrdsian drawl, and the song seems to tick-tock to a stop. But storming over the top is a riff from guitarist Mike Campbell. Another chorus and you know there's a bridge creeping up. Petty, in a gesture that's both droll and dynamic, mutters "Hit it" to announce it. The proceedings slow again, then Campbell's gears start grinding again, and there's a grand crescendo that is, if you'll pardon the pun, heartbreakingly wicked. Then Petty murmurs a deep, resonate "No-oh" in a broken brilliantly understated way tha...