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ËÅÍÒÀ ÍÎÂÎÑÒÅÉ ÒÎÌÀ ÏÅÒÒÈ - 1

Goldenday: Íîâîñòè, ôàêòû, èíòåðåñíûå ñòàòüè, ôîòî è ïð.

Îòâåòîâ - 159, ñòð: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 All

Goldenday: Ààààààààààà!!!!! Óæå õî÷ó!!

Voldar:  ïîòîêå âîñòîðæåííûõ îòêëèêîâ íà “Good Enough”,âñòðå÷àþòñÿ è òàêèå ãàäû. New Tom Petty Song "Good Enough" Is Not, Actually Posted by Mike Conklin on Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 11:33 AM I'm sorry about the joke up there in the headline, but it's really not a very good song. Hopefully the rest of the forthcoming (and very stupidly titled) Mojo is better, but I do not have high hopes. Listen here, if you absolutely must, or just go here and watch a live performance of "American Girl" from 1978. [Vulture] êîììåíòû You are crazy. "Good Enough" is fantastic. The sound of one of the best rock bands in the world totally killing it. http://www.thelmagazine.com/TheMeasure/archives/2010/02/26/new-tom-petty-song-good-enough-is-not-actually

Goldenday: Òàê... ãäå ìîé "Ñìèò-Âåññîí"?


SLQ: Goldenday ïèøåò: Òàê... ãäå ìîé "Ñìèò-Âåññîí"? Äà ïóñòü æèâåò, íó æàëü, ÷òî ÷åëîâåê íè÷åãî â õîðîøåé ìóçûêå íå ïîíèìàåò

Voldar: Íà ñàéòå Rock Band ïîÿâèëèñü îïèñàíèå ïåñåí Òîìà,âêëþ÷åííûõ â ýòó èãðó. http://www.rockband.com/songs/iwontbackdown

Voldar: Íà îôôñàéòå ïîêà íåò äàæå òðåêëèñòà íîâîãî àëüáîìà,à îáåùàëè íà ýòîé íåäåëå,íó ¸ - MOJO.

Voldar: Íà ñàéòå guitarplayer â 2006 ãîäó ê âûõîäó Highway Companion áûëî îïóáëèêîâàíî èíòåðâüþ ñ Òîìîì.Î÷åíü èíòåðåñíî ïî÷èòàòü î òîì êàê ñîçäàâàëñÿ àëüáîì,î ñîâìåñòíîé ðàáîòå ñ Äæåôôîì è ãèòàðàõ íà êîòîðûõ èãðàåò Òîì. Tom Petty: 30 Years & Counting Art Thompson ,Jun 22, 2006 “We were just listening to Buck Owens on the way over here,” says Tom Petty as he settles into an easy chair at the Heartbreakers’ rehearsal studio after spending most of the day stuck in L.A. traffic. “I was in this band called the Epics when I was 16, and we used to go out on road trips on the weekends. A lot of times, we’d be driving back from the gig, and we’d pull into these truck stops where I’d hear Buck Owens on the jukebox. I thought he was terrific.” Petty’s recollections of hearing the late country star’s 45s spinning on a jukebox highlight the long road he has traveled since his earliest days with both the Epics and the country-rock band Mudcrutch—the group that would give him his first taste of songwriting success, as well as bring him together with Heartbreakers’ guitarist Mike Campbell and keyboardist Benmont Tench. Petty certainly has a lot to reflect on as the Heartbreakers celebrate their 30th Anniversary this year. The band’s remarkable run to the top—which began with the 1976 release of their debut album Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers—has resulted in 50 million records sold, four Grammy Awards (from 16 nominations), 25 top singles, and more music-industry honoraria than any of the typically self-effacing members of the Heartbreakers probably cares to recall. Petty’s remarkable band dropped onto the scene at a time when rock fans were salivating for some of the primal elements that were AWOL in the bloated rock scene of the late 1970s. “We probably invented new wave, but we were running ahead of it,” says Petty. “I didn’t want any label to be put on us, and I was very conscious that we were a rock and roll band and not anything else.” Apparently, that’s all that the millions of new riders on the Heartbreakers’ bandwagon wanted them to be. Following the 1979 release of their powerhouse third album, Damn the Torpedoes, the band had to suddenly balance their phenomenal success with the challenge of figuring out what to do next. And instead of blowing to bits, as did so many other young groups that had skyrocketed to the top of the charts, the Heartbreakers just kept churning out album after album of great music. To celebrate the band’s 30th year, a couple of exciting projects are in the works. Perhaps the biggest treat for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers fans is a feature-length documentary directed by famed auteur Peter Bogdanovich. The famously private band members allowed Bogdanovich access that no one else has ever been offered, and the yet untitled film promises to be the most comprehensive overview of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers ever produced. Principal photography started last year, but, at press time, there was no release date scheduled. The Heartbreakers’ summer anniversary tour is also designed to be an event, with a revolving cadre of famous guest stars. The actual dates weren’t confirmed at the time of our interview, but the opening acts are reported to include Pearl Jam, the Allman Brothers, and Trey Anastasio. Petty is also keeping busy doing the second season of Tom Petty’s Buried Treasure—his weekly XM Satellite Radio Network show—and voicing the character of Lucky on King of the Hill. Most recently, Petty, Campbell, and producer (and former ELO frontman) Jeff Lynne joined forces to record Tom’s third solo album, Highway Companion [American Recordings], a spare but deliciously inviting album that sounds in many ways like something the band might have recorded decades ago. It’s a tribute to the consistency and depth of Petty’s songwriting, as well as how timeless his songs sound when Campbell applies his magic to them. How did you wind up partnering with Jeff Lynne again on your new solo album? Jeff and I were asked by Olivia Harrison [George Harrison’s wife] if we would go to New York and induct George into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004, and we were supposed to play a couple of his songs. Jeff doesn’t like to play live, but I talked him into it. The performance went well, so on the trip back I said to him, “We ought to do a track sometime.” Then, Mike and I went over to Jeff’s house, showed him a tune, and he wanted to cut it right there in his studio. We didn’t have a band, so Jeff said, “You play drums don’t you?” So I wound up being the drummer. Anyway, that first track went really nice, so we just pitched camp at Jeff’s studio. I kept dragging out songs, and, the next thing we knew, we’d recorded ten tracks. It was just the three of us. Jeff played bass, Mike played all the solos, and each one of us would fill in wherever we could on keyboard and guitar. Was it your intent to produce a very streamlined sound? Early on, we decided not to use a lot of instrumentation. I kept saying to Jeff and Mike that I wanted it to sound like a combo. I wanted to leave a lot of space, and not try to fill everything in. Of course, Jeff is a master at recording vocals, and he knows how to make a vocal sound full, even when there are not a lot of different textures around it. We didn’t use a lot of keyboards, either. Because this was a solo record, I steered away from anything that was too Heartbreakers sounding. There’s certainly more slide playing than on most Heartbreakers albums. Mike kept saying, “Do you really want slide again?” I wanted this record to have a distinct vibe, and a continuity of sound, and his slide playing really does that. There’s slide on just about every number, but Mike was able to find enough tonal variations to produce lots of textures without the album sounding slickly produced. We’ve always paid a lot of attention to the textures and characters the guitars create. There’s a consistency in the Heartbreaker’s sound that goes back to when you first started, and when you listen to some of the early Mudcrutch songs on Playback, it’s impressive how good you guys sounded even way back then. It’s amazing, because I think I was 19 when we recorded some of those songs. We had never really been in a studio before, and we did “Up in Mississippi Tonight” and one other song in four or five hours. They were done really fast, put on a 45, and released in the Gainesville area—which is where we were from. “Mississippi” did pretty well on the radio. For a local group, we got a lot of play on it, which was cool, because we got to raise our prices a little bit. But we were just kids, and how we did it I have no idea. It’s all kind of mystical—like it was meant to be. To what do you attribute the Heartbreakers ability to stay together for so long? We just like to do it. We’re probably one of the five top rock and roll groups, and I couldn’t think of leaving. To go anywhere else would be a disappointment. But I think the number one reason we’ve stayed together is that we have become a family over all these years. Me and Mike and Ben go back further than the Heartbreakers—back to around 1970. I don’t have a lot of family of my own, and Mike is the same way, so we have that bond together. We’re very much like brothers, and we fight like brothers, too. But the band has somehow become bigger than all of us. I see it in kind of a holy way. The Heartbreakers have made so many people happy that it would almost be a sacrilege to turn my back on it. Do you think the band could make it if you had to start over today? No, I don’t. We were so nurtured by Denny Cordell—a great producer who had done all these amazing records, such as “A Whiter Shade of Pale” and all the Joe Cocker stuff. He was the secret. He signed us, and he let us play in the studio for a year before we put our record out. If we had just shown up in town, and were told to cut a record, I don’t think it would have been that good. We were allowed to grow. The first record we put out did okay, the next did even better, and the third one just exploded. How is the situation different now? These days, if a group puts out their first record and doesn’t have any success, the record company just moves on to another group. It’s more cost efficient or something. The sort of nurturing we got doesn’t seem to go on today. Denny was looking at us as a band that was going to have a career, rather than a band that was going to make a hit record. And what got drilled into our heads is that it’s not about any particular record, it’s about a consistency of work. You want your work to be the best it can be all the time, and you don’t want to get caught up in what everyone else is doing, or what is an immediate hit. If you do good work it will take care of you. I think that’s what has carried us this far. When you go back and listen to some of these old songs we did, they still hold up. I’m kind of surprised by it, too. I heard “Breakdown” on the radio a few days ago, and it sounded great. That was a really well made little record. And we were just kids. We didn’t know we were making something that was going to last for decades. The Heartbreakers have a very identifiable guitar sound. Can you explain what you do to create that? Mike and I have a sound we make together that is particularly us, and it doesn’t happen when we play with other people. There’s something the two of us instinctively do. It’s about the way our chords ring, or their voicings, or how our tones work together. It’s partly because we’ve played together for so long, but it’s also because we always had to make a lot of racket to carry that sound in a small group. We’ve learned how to use it to our advantage—especially when we play live. What kind of music has inspired you lately? I really like blues a lot—especially the stuff on the Chess label by Lightning Hopkins, Muddy Waters, and others. There’s something extremely pure and poetic about that music. Some of it is pretty rugged and raw, but there’s also something about it that’s just beautiful. That’s what’s speaking to me lately. But I have to listen to so much music these days for my weekly satellite radio show. I go through a lot of stuff putting the shows together—a really wide range of blues, R&B, rock, and garage rock from the ’50s, ’60s, and ’70s. How has your setup evolved over the years? I was using Vox amps for many years, and then I started playing Fender Bassmans, but they sounded a bit too growly for me. Then, I came across this old red Marshall on the road, and I started using that. Last year, we rolled out the old Vox Super Beatles we’d bought back in the band’s early days. They make a pretty cool sound, so we tried them again, and we wound up using them on the last tour. But I still kept the Marshall, which I run though a Vox cabinet. I also have another Vox head and cabinet, and I use a footswitch to select either the Marshall or the Vox or both. What effect has the Marshall/Vox rig had on your stage volume? I’m probably playing louder now. I try not to, but when you play big places you need a little air movement. A lot of people are putting their amps under the stage and playing though headphones, but I need to feel some air moving. But I’m not slamming it to 10 and trying to kill everybody. I just turn it up enough to where the sound is full and it has some nice bottom. What is your main guitar now? I started playing Stratocasters again last year—mainly early ’60s models. I like Teles, Gretsches, and Rickenbackers, but I guess if I had to pick one guitar to get the job done, it would be a Strat. I used about a dozen different guitars on the last tour—of course, some were in different tunings, and some were acoustics. One of my favorite guitars for recording is an Epiphone Casino. It’s a great guitar, but it’s kind of tough to take it on the road because it feeds back at loud volumes. Even so, the last time we were in here rehearsing, the Casino is what I was playing most of the time. Do you often write songs in response to things that have affected you on a personal level? I’m sure that everything you write probably comes from some place in your soul. I mean, you can only write what you know, so it’s all going to creep in there. But I don’t often sit down and say, “I’m going to write about this.” I just start playing, and things come in. When something feels like it has a nice ring to it, and it connects with me, then I trust it. Sometimes, I’ll hear the song six months later, and think, “I know exactly what was on my mind then.” Have there been songs you thought were too introspective to release? I thought “I Won’t Back Down” was too introspective. I was hesitant with that one, because there’s not much ambiguity or metaphor in it. It just says it. I remember asking Jeff Lynne—who produced it—if he thought the song might be a little embarrassing. He said, “No. It feels great.” So I was surprised when it was received the way it was. People are always telling me, “That song helped me through the worst time of my life.” The thing about songwriting is that there’s an exception to every rule. It’s hard to talk about it generally, because each song is so different. I think my best songs are the ones where you can find different levels of meaning in them. Those are the ones I find the most intriguing, but I don’t always write that way. Sometimes, I’ll write a linear kind of thing, such as “Into the Great Wide Open,” which is just straight-on storytelling. But the ones I really like have a bit of ambiguity. I don’t have a method that always works. The process is so random, and yet it keeps happening. I just look up every year or so, and I’ve got ten more songs. It’s not something I work at every day, but I kind of feel that I’m never done writing. I’m always looking for a song.

Voldar: Ïîÿâèëñÿ îôèöèàëüíûé áàííåð ãàñòðîëüíîãî òóðà 2010.Î íîâîì àëüáîìå ïîêà èíôîðìàöèè íåò,çàòî â êîììåíòàðèÿõ íà ñòðàíèöå òóðà ðàçäàþòñÿ ìíîãî÷èñëåííûå ñòîíû ïîêëîííèêîâ èç ãîðîäîâ íå âêëþ÷åííûõ â ãðàôèê âûñòóïëåíèé.

Goldenday: Âîò ýòî ÿ ïîíèìàþ À òî êîå-êòî â ïðîøëîì ãîäó íà äðóæåñòâåííîì ôîðóìå ïûòàëñÿ äîêàçûâàòü, ÷òî Òîì ïðåêðàùàåò ãàñòðîëüíóþ äåÿòåëüíîñòü.

Voldar: Ñåé÷àñ áðîñèëîñü â ãëàçà,÷òî âåðõíÿÿ ÷àñòü ñåðäöà íà áàííåðå âûãëÿäèò íåñêîëüêî äâóñìûñëåííî.

SLQ: Voldar ïèøåò: Ñåé÷àñ áðîñèëîñü â ãëàçà,÷òî âåðõíÿÿ ÷àñòü ñåðäöà íà áàííåðå âûãëÿäèò íåñêîëüêî äâóñìûñëåííî. Äà óæ.....

Voldar: Íà ôåðìå îäèí èç ïîëüçîâàòåëåé ðàçìåñòèë îòðûâîê èç èíòåðâüþ ñ Òîìîì ñ Rolling Stone.com,òîëüêî íà ñàéòå åãî íåò.Èç èíòåðâüþ ìîæíî óçíàòü êàê áóäóò íàçûâàòüñÿ íåêîòîðûå ïåñíè ñ íîâîãî àëüáîìà è â êàêîì ñòèëå îíè íàïèñàíû. From Rolling Stone.com "I knew there was something in the band that hadn't been brought out," says Tom Petty, who let the Heartbreakers run wild on Mojo, his loudest, loosest, bluesiest album ever. "I was listening to early Jeff Beck Group, Peter Green, Muddy Waters, even a little JJ Cale — so that's kind of the way I was thinking when I was writing." To make it all work, Petty pushed guitarist Mike Campbell to let go of his signature restraint and step up as a guitar hero: He solos with almost Buddy Guy-like abandon throughout and riffs Zep-style on the surprisingly heavy "Good Enough." There's more than just blues rock here, though. "First Flash of Freedom" has a psychedelic swing that suggests Love; the stoner's lament "Don't Pull Me Over" is an unexpected stab at reggae; and "The Trip to Pirate's Cove" is a classic Petty story-song ("I've got a friend in Mendocino/And it's getting close to harvest time," he sings). Says Petty, "We were having so much fun recording that we had to force ourselves to pull the plug — it could have gone on and on."

Voldar: Îïèñàíèå ïîÿâèëîñü çäåñü: http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/32513074/spring_music_preview_2010/4

Voldar: Íà åù¸ îäíîé ôîòêå ñ âå÷åðèíêè âèëáóðèñ,Òîì ïî÷åìó òî ñòîèò ñ ïàëî÷êîé.Ìîæåò êòî çíàåò ÷òî ñ íèì?

ÒÍÞ: ß óæå ãäå-òî òàêîå âèäåëà..... ìîæåò, â êàêîì-íèáóäü êëèïå? À ãäå Äæîðäæè?

Voldar: Åëåíà,ñïàñèáî çà èíôîðìàöèþ î êîëåíå Òîìà,íàâåðíî åìó ïîðà çàâÿçûâàòü õîäèòü â êåäàõ.Ê ñîæàëåíèþ âñå ïîñòû çà â÷åðàøíèé äåíü èç-çà ãëþêà ó íàøèõ õîñòåðîâ ïðîïàëè â òîì ÷èñëå è âàøå ñîîáùåíèå î ðåëèçå Classic Albums (Classic Albums (Eagle Vision) íà DVD è BluRay Damn the Torpedoes ...The DVD features newly filmed contributions from the band members Tom Petty, Mike Campbell, Benmont Tench, Ron Blair and Stan Lynch along with co-producer Jimmy Iovine and engineer Shelly Yakus as they analyse the tracks from the original multi-track tapes and through new and archive performances. Çàøåë íà ñàéò Eagle Vision,íî òàì êàê íå ñòðàííî ýòîò ðåëèç ïîêà íå îáúÿâëåí. http://www.eaglerockent.com/eaglerockUSA/index.php Èíòåðåñíî.÷òî òàì óæå âûïóñòèëè â òîé æå ñåðèè Electric Light Orchestra: Out of the Blue - Live at Wembley Special Edition DVD

krasnovenator: Äæîðäæè äàâíî íåò, à ôîòîãðàôèÿ ýòî ñ ïðåçåíòàöèè äîðîãóùåé êíèãè î TW. Ðàä, ÷òî äåëþêñîâñêàÿ àíòîëîãèÿ, êîòîðóþ ÿ âûëîæèë íà òîððåíòå, ïîíðàâèëàñü.

Voldar: Îãðîìíîå Âàì,ñïàñèáî Àëåêñàíäð çà àíòîëîãèþ,îíà ê ñîæàëåíèþ òîæå íå äåø¸âàÿ.

Goldenday: Àëåêñàíäð, ÿ ïðèñîåäèíÿþñü ê ñëîâàì Âîëîäè ïî ïîâîäó áëàãîäàðíîñòè çà àíòîëîãèþ. Ïÿòûé, áîíóñíûé äèñê, ïðîñòî ðàäóåò äóøó. Î÷åíü ðàä, ÷òî èìåþ âîçìîæíîñòü ñëóøàòü âñ¸ öåëèêîì. Ñïàñèáî!

krasnovenator: Âîò, êñòàòè åùå îäíà ôîòêà ñ ïðåçåíòàöèè. È òåêñò ê íåé: "...a fab Traveling Wilburys book release party in Beverly Hills. The book is one of those fancy GENESIS books and it’s worth every penny as the photos are mindblowers! At the party were: Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, Olivia & Dhani Harrison, Jim Keltner, Eric Idle, Gary Wright, Joe Walsh….and Ringo! It all went down at James Perse hip clothing store on North Canon Drive in BH."



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