Behind The Song

The Massive Tom Petty Hit He Avoided Playing Live In His Later Years

Itโ€™s not uncommon for an artist to end up disliking their biggest hits, and such was the case for the first single off Tom Petty and the Heartbreakersโ€™ eponymous debut from 1976. The song was understandably a staple in the Heartbreakersโ€™ live sets for years.

But in a 2004 interview with Paul Zollo, Tom Petty admitted to avoiding the song in his later years.

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Why Tom Petty Avoided Playing This Massive Hit

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers burst onto the rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll scene with their eponymous debut in 1976, featuring singles โ€œBreakdownโ€ and โ€œAmerican Girl.โ€ The former track might not have topped the charts, but it quickly became a fan favorite. โ€œBreakdownโ€ was a staple of the Heartbreakersโ€™ live set for decades.

But by 2004, Pettyโ€™s opinion had cooled slightly. โ€œI donโ€™t want to play [that song] very often,โ€ he told interviewer Paul Zollo. โ€œI think because early in our career we played it so much, I think I relate it to being 25. It doesnโ€™t feel like a song I would sing now. But never say never. Thatโ€™s one we donโ€™t play much. Hardly ever.โ€

Petty admitted that although the band didnโ€™t play it live as much as they used to, he still enjoyed the track. โ€œItโ€™s a great little record,โ€ he said. โ€œWhen I hear it on the radio, I really like it.โ€

The rock โ€˜nโ€™ roller wrote โ€œBreakdownโ€ while on break at the studio. โ€œThese were just strange days,โ€ Petty recalled. โ€œI wrote the whole song, words, and music. Itโ€™s something I wouldnโ€™t really think I could do now. But I guess I could. But when youโ€™re young and just so innocent, it was just something that happened. You know, we werenโ€™t going to sit around for two hours and let them fix the mics or whatever without doing something, so we did that.โ€

How The Fab Four Inspired Tom Pettyโ€™s Signature Hit

Years before Tom Petty became the rock star we know him as today, he was a kid growing up in Gainesville, Florida, watching the Beatles play on the Ed Sullivan Show. โ€œIt sort of hit me like a lightning bolt to the brain that, oh, I see, you know?โ€ Petty recalled in a 2006 Fresh Air interview. โ€œYou have your friends, and you all learn an instrument, and youโ€™re a self-contained unit. This is brilliant, you know? This looks like a great, great job to me. And apparently, it did to lots of people because very quickly after that, there were bands forming in garages all over town.โ€

When Petty sat down at the piano to write โ€œBreakdown,โ€ he still had the Beatles on the brain. In a Performing Songwriter interview, Petty recalled, โ€œWe got the drumbeat [for โ€œBreakdownโ€] from a Beatles record, โ€œAll I Got To Do.โ€ We just varied it. That was the idea to have that kind of broken rhythm on the hi-hat.โ€ย 

Petty might have had a hard time relating to a song he wrote in his mid-20s, but that didnโ€™t stop the rest of his fans from adoring the song for decades after its release. โ€œBreakdownโ€ is among Pettyโ€™s most memorable tracks, cementing its slinky, sultry groove and iconic riff in rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll history.

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