As any musician knows, sometimes, the way a song sounds in your head doesnโt end up working out in real life, and such was the case for a standalone Tom Petty song that Johnny Cash rejected over its somewhat jazzy harmonic structure. (โSomewhatโ being the operative word here.)
Petty once said he pictured the 1987 track as a B movie starring the Man in Black himself, so it only made sense that he reached out to Cash to cover the song. However, some of Pettyโs chords rubbed Cashโs cowboy-chord sensibility the wrong way.
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Johnny Cash Rejected This Tom Petty Song Over a Chord
Tom Pettyโs seventh studio album, Let Me Up (Iโve Had Enough), might not feature his most memorable hits, but it does include one track that has an interesting connection to country music legend Johnny Cash. The third track off the albumโs B-side, โA Self-Made Man,โ is a bouncy, bravado-filled rocker describing a self-made man who knows about pride and knows how to lose.
In Paul Zolloโs 2005 book Conversations with Tom Petty, the Heartbreakers frontman described trying to get Johnny Cash, whom Petty had very loosely based his song around, to cover the track in the studio. Laughing at the memory, Petty told Zollot that Cash โcouldnโt deal with the major-seventh chord.โ
โHe just said, โI canโt sing over that. My voice doesnโt sound right with it. Can you find another chord?โ And I couldn’t come up with another chord that sounded right,โ Petty said. โBut I always wanted him to do it because he liked it. And he wanted to do it. He just couldnโt get over that major-seventh chord.โ
Petty was no stranger to major-seventh chords, often incorporating these dreamy, jazz-adjacent harmonies to some of his greatest hits like โInto The Great Wide Openโ and โMary Janeโs Last Dance.โ But for Cash, even a relatively small addition of a raised seventh chord was a bit too off-brand for someone who almost exclusively dealt with diatonic or the classic country leading tone (think โFolsom Prison Bluesโ).
The Heartbreakers Frontman Had Been in Cashโs Shoes Before
As disappointing as it must have been for Tom Petty to have his song rejected by Johnny Cash, he could certainly empathize with Cashโs point. Three years prior, Petty rejected his guitarist, Mike Campbellโs track, โBoys of Summer,โ for a similar reason. The harmonies werenโt quite right. By the time the song wound up in the hands of Don Henley, of course, Campbell had worked the kinks out and transformed the song into a bona fide smash hit.
โIn Tomโs defense, when I got to the chorus, I went to a different chord,โ Campbell recalled on Brian Koppelmanโs podcast The Moment. โIt was kind of like a minor chord. As the song ended up, on the chorus it goes to that big major chord. You know, it lifts up. So, [Tom] heard a slightly inferior version. I remember when it went by, we were kind of grooving to it, and it got to that chord, and Jimmy Iovine goes, โEh, it sounds like jazz.โโ
While either scenarioโJohnny Cash rejecting Tom Petty, Tom Petty rejecting Mike Campbellโcould be seen as a missed opportunity to expand a singerโs musical stylings (and even Petty admitted to regretting his decision later on), we think itโs safe to say the artistโs decisions didnโt do much to disaffect the rest of their careers.
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