Thomas Earl Petty (October 20, 1950 – October 2, 2017) was an American musician. He was the leader of the rock bands Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Mudcrutch. Petty was also a member of the late 1980s supergroup the Traveling Wilburys, and had success as a solo artist.
Petty had many hit records. Hit
singles with the Heartbreakers include "American
Girl" (1976), "Don't Do Me
Like That" (1979), "Refugee"
(1980), "The Waiting"
(1981), "Don't Come Around Here No
More" (1985) and "Learning
to Fly" (1991). Petty's solo hits include "I Won't Back Down" (1989), "Free Fallin'" (1989), and "You Don't Know How It Feels" (1994). Solo or with the
Heartbreakers, he had hit albums from the 1970s through the 2010s and sold more
than 80 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling music
artists of all time. Petty and the Heartbreakers were inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002. Petty was honored as MusiCares Person of the
Year in February 2017 for his contributions to music and for his philanthropy.
He also had a minor acting career, most notably starring in a recurring role as
the voice of Lucky Kleinschmidt in the animated comedy series King of the Hill
from 2004 to the show's end in 2009.
Petty died of an accidental drug
overdose at the age of 66, one week after the end of the Heartbreakers' 40th
Anniversary Tour in 2017.
Early life
Petty was born on October 20,
1950, in Gainesville, Florida, the first of two sons of Kitty Petty (nee
Avery), a local tax office worker, and Earl Petty, who was a traveling
salesman. His brother Bruce was seven years younger.
Petty grew up in the Northeast
Gainesville Residential District, known locally as the Duckpond. After his
death, a historical marker was placed in the neighborhood and a nearby park was
renamed to Tom Petty Park.
His interest in rock and roll
music began at age ten when he met Elvis Presley.
In the summer of 1961, his uncle
was working on the set of Presley's film Follow That Dream, in nearby Ocala,
and invited Petty to watch the shoot. He instantly became a Presley fan, and
when he returned that Saturday, he was greeted by his friend Keith Harben, and
soon traded his Wham-O slingshot for a collection of Elvis 45s. Of that meeting
with Presley, Petty said, "Elvis
glowed."
Don Felder, a fellow Gainesville
resident who later joined the Eagles, claimed in his autobiography that he was
one of Petty's first guitar teachers although Petty said that Felder taught him
to play piano instead. As a young man, Petty worked briefly on the grounds crew
of the University of Florida, but never attended as a student. An Ogeechee lime
tree that he purportedly planted while employed at the university is now called
the Tom Petty tree (Petty stated that he did not recall planting any trees). He
also worked briefly as a gravedigger.
Petty also overcame a difficult
relationship with his father. According to Petty, his father found it difficult
to accept that Petty was "a
mild-mannered kid who was interested in the arts" and subjected him to
verbal and physical abuse on a regular basis. Petty has described his father as
a "wild, gambling drinker guy".
Petty was close to his mother and remained close to his brother, Bruce.
Career
1976–1987: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Shortly after embracing his
musical aspirations, Petty started a band known as the Epics, which later
evolved into Mudcrutch. The band included future Heartbreakers Mike Campbell
and Benmont Tench and was popular in Gainesville, but their recordings went
unnoticed by a mainstream audience. They recorded at The Church Studio in
Tulsa, Oklahoma. Their only single, "Depot
Street", released in 1975 by Shelter Records, failed to chart.
After Mudcrutch split up, Petty
reluctantly agreed to pursue a solo career. Tench decided to form his own
group, whose sound Petty appreciated. Eventually, Petty and Campbell
collaborated with Tench, Ron Blair and Stan Lynch, forming the first lineup of
the Heartbreakers. Their eponymous debut album gained minute popularity amongst
American audiences, achieving greater success in Britain. The singles "American Girl" and "Breakdown" (re-released in
1977) peaked at No. 40 after the band toured in the United Kingdom in support
of Nils Lofgren. The debut album was released by Shelter Records, which at that
time was distributed by ABC Records.
Their second album, You're Gonna
Get It!, was the band's first Top 40 album, featuring the singles "I Need to Know" and "Listen to Her Heart". Their
third album, Damn the Torpedoes, quickly went platinum, selling nearly two
million copies; it includes their breakthrough singles "Don't Do Me Like That", "Here Comes My Girl",
"Even the Losers" and "Refugee".
In September 1979, Tom Petty and
the Heartbreakers performed at a Musicians United for Safe Energy concert at
Madison Square Garden in New York. Their rendition of "Cry to Me" was featured on the resulting album, No
Nukes.
The 4th album Hard Promises,
released in 1981, became a top-ten hit, going platinum and spawning the hit
single "The Waiting". The
album also featured Petty's first duet, "Insider"
with Stevie Nicks.
Bass player Ron Blair quit the
group and was replaced on the fifth album, Long After Dark (1982), by Howie
Epstein; the resulting lineup lasted until 1994. The album contained the hit "You Got Lucky". In 1985, the
band participated in Live Aid, playing four songs at John F. Kennedy Stadium,
in Philadelphia. Southern Accents was also released in 1985. This album
included the hit single "Don't Come
Around Here No More", which was produced by Dave Stewart. The song's
video featured Petty dressed as the Mad Hatter, mocking and chasing Alice from
the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, then cutting and eating her as if
she were a cake. The ensuing tour led to the live album Pack Up the Plantation:
Live! and an invitation from Bob Dylan—Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers joined
him on his True Confessions Tour. They also played some dates with the Grateful
Dead in 1986 and 1987. Also in 1987, the group released Let Me Up (I've Had
Enough) which includes "Jammin'
Me" which Petty wrote with Dylan.
1988–1991: Traveling Wilburys and solo career
In 1988, Petty, along with
George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison and Jeff Lynne, was a founding member
of the Traveling Wilburys. The band's first song, "Handle with Care", was intended as a B-side of one of
Harrison's singles, but was judged too good for that purpose and the group
decided to record a full album, Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1. A second Wilburys
album, mischievously titled Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3 and recorded without the
recently deceased Orbison, followed in 1990. The album was named Vol. 3 as a
response to a series of bootlegged studio sessions being sold as Travelling
Wilburys Vol. 2. Petty incorporated Traveling Wilburys songs into his live
shows, consistently playing "Handle
with Care" in shows from 2003 to 2006, and for his 2008 tour adding
"surprises" such as "End of the Line" to the set list.
In 1989, Petty released Full
Moon Fever, which featured hits "I
Won't Back Down", "Free Fallin'" and "Runnin' Down a Dream". It was nominally his first solo
album, although several Heartbreakers and other well-known musicians
participated: Mike Campbell co-produced the album with Petty and Jeff Lynne of
Electric Light Orchestra, and backing musicians included Campbell, Lynne, and
fellow Wilburys Roy Orbison and George Harrison (Ringo Starr appears on drums
in the video for "I Won't Back
Down", but they were actually performed by Phil Jones).
Petty and the Heartbreakers
reformed in 1991 and released Into the Great Wide Open, which was co-produced
by Lynne and included the hit singles "Learning
To Fly" and "Into the Great
Wide Open", the latter featuring Johnny Depp and Faye Dunaway in the
music video.
Before leaving MCA Records,
Petty and the Heartbreakers got together to record, live in the studio, two new
songs for a Greatest Hits package: "Mary Jane's Last Dance" and
Thunderclap Newman's "Something in
the Air". This was Stan Lynch's last recorded performance with the
Heartbreakers. Petty commented "He
left right after the session without really saying goodbye." The
package went on to sell over ten million copies, therefore receiving diamond
certification by the RIAA.
1991–2017: Move to Warner Bros. Records
In 1989, while still under
contract to MCA, Petty secretly signed a lucrative deal with Warner Bros.
Records, to which the Traveling Wilburys had been signed. His first album on
his new label, 1994's Wildflowers (Petty's second of three solo albums),
included the highly beloved title track, as well as the singles "You Don't Know How It Feels",
"You Wreck Me", "It's Good to Be King", and "A Higher Place". The album,
produced by Rick Rubin, sold over three million copies in the United States.
In 1996, Petty, with the
Heartbreakers, released a soundtrack to the movie She's the One, starring Cameron
Diaz and Jennifer Aniston (see Songs and Music from "She's the One"). The album's singles were "Walls (Circus)" (featuring
Lindsey Buckingham), "Climb that
Hill", and a song written by Lucinda Williams, "Change the Locks". The album also included a cover of "Asshole", a song by Beck. The
same year, the band accompanied Johnny Cash on Unchained (provisionally titled "Petty Cash"), for which Cash
would win a Grammy for Best Country Album (Cash would later cover Petty's "I Won't Back Down" on
American III: Solitary Man).
In 1999, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers released their last album with Rubin at the helm, Echo. Two songs
were released as singles in the U.S., "Room
at the Top" and "Free Girl
Now". The album reached number 10 in the U.S. album charts.
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
played "I Won't Back Down"
at the America: A Tribute to Heroes benefit concert for victims of the
September 11, 2001 attacks. The following year, they played "Taxman", "I Need You"
and "Handle with Care"
(joined for the last by Jeff Lynne, Dhani Harrison, and Jim Keltner) at the
Concert for George in honor of Petty's friend and former bandmate George
Harrison.
Petty's 2002 release, The Last
DJ, was an album-length critique of the practices within the music industry.
The title track, inspired by Los Angeles radio personality Jim Ladd, bemoaned
the end of the freedom that radio DJs once had to personally select songs for
their station's playlists. The album peaked at number nine on the Billboard 200
album chart in the United States.
In 2005, Petty began hosting his
own show "Buried Treasure"
on XM Satellite Radio, on which he shared selections from his personal record
collection.
In 2006, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers headlined the fifth annual Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival as
part of their "30th Anniversary
Tour". Special guests included Stevie Nicks, Pearl Jam, the Allman
Brothers Band, Trey Anastasio, the Derek Trucks Band, and the Black Crowes.
Nicks joined Petty and the Heartbreakers on stage for "a selection of songs" including "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around".
In July 2006, Petty released a
solo album titled Highway Companion, which included the hit "Saving Grace". It debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200, which was Petty's highest chart position since the introduction
of the Nielsen SoundScan system for tracking album sales in 1991. Highway
Companion was briefly promoted on the tour with the Heartbreakers in 2006, with
performances of "Saving Grace",
"Square One", "Down South" and "Flirting with Time".
During the summer of 2007, Petty
reunited with his old bandmates Tom Leadon and Randall Marsh along with
Heartbreakers Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell to reform his pre-Heartbreakers
band Mudcrutch. The quintet recorded an album of 14 songs that was released on
April 29, 2008 (on iTunes, an additional song "Special Place" was available if the album was
pre-ordered). The band supported the album with a brief tour of California in
the spring of 2008.
In 2007, Petty and the
Heartbreakers’ contributed a cover of "I'm
Walkin'" to the album Goin' Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino. The
album's sales helped buy instruments for students in New Orleans public schools
and they contributed to the building of a community center in the city's
Hurricane Katrina-damaged Ninth Ward.
On February 3, 2008, Tom Petty
and the Heartbreakers performed during the halftime-show of Super Bowl XLII at
the University of Phoenix Stadium. They played "American Girl", "I Won't Back Down", "Free
Fallin" and "Runnin' Down a
Dream". That summer, the band toured North America with Steve Winwood
as the opening act. Winwood joined Petty and the Heartbreakers on stage at
select shows and performed his Spencer Davis Group hit "Gimme Some Lovin'", and occasionally he performed his
Blind Faith hit "Can't Find My Way
Home". In November 2009 the boxed set The Live Anthology, a
compilation of live recordings from 1978 to 2006, was released.
The band's twelfth album Mojo
was released on June 15, 2010, and reached number two on the Billboard 200
album chart. Petty described the album as "Blues-based.
Some of the tunes are longer, more jam-y kind of music. A couple of tracks
really sound like the Allman Brothers—not the songs but the atmosphere of the band."
To promote the record, the band appeared as the musical guests on Saturday
Night Live on May 15, 2010. The release of Mojo was followed by a North
American summer tour. Prior to the tour, five of the band's guitars, including
two owned by Petty, were stolen from their practice space in Culver City,
California in April 2010. The items were recovered by Los Angeles police the
next week.
In 2012, the band went on a
world tour that included their first European dates in 20 years and their first
ever concerts in the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and
Labrador.
On July 28, 2014, Reprise
Records released Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' thirteenth studio album,
Hypnotic Eye. The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, becoming
the first Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers album to ever top the chart. On
November 20, 2015, the Tom Petty Radio channel debuted on SiriusXM.
In 2017, the Heartbreakers
embarked on a 40th Anniversary Tour of the United States. The tour began on
April 20 in Oklahoma City and ended on September 25 with a performance at the
Hollywood Bowl in Hollywood, California. The Hollywood Bowl concert, which would
ultimately be the Heartbreakers' final show, ended with a performance of "American Girl".
On September 28, 2018, Reprise
Records released An American Treasure, a 60-track career-spanning box set
featuring dozens of previously unreleased recordings, alternate versions of
classic songs, rarities, historic live performances and deep tracks. The box
set was preceded by the first single, "Keep
A Little Soul", in July 2018. The song is an unreleased outtake
originally recorded in 1982 during the Long After Dark sessions.
Acting
Petty's first appearance in film
took place in 1978, when he had a cameo in FM. He later had a small part in
1987's Made in Heaven and appeared in several episodes of It's Garry
Shandling's Show between 1987 and 1990, playing himself as one of Garry
Shandling's neighbors. Petty was also featured in Shandling's other show, The
Larry Sanders Show, as one of the Story within a story final guests. In the
episode, Petty gets bumped from the show and nearly comes to blows with Greg
Kinnear.
Petty appeared in the 1997 film
The Postman, directed by and starring Kevin Costner, as the Bridge City Mayor
(from the dialogue it is implied that he is playing a future history version of
himself). In 2002, he appeared on The Simpsons in the episode "How I Spent My Strummer
Vacation", along with Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Lenny Kravitz,
Elvis Costello, and Brian Setzer. In it, Petty spoofed himself as a tutor to
Homer Simpson on the art of lyric writing, composing a brief song about a drunk
girl driving down the road while concerned with the state of public schools.
Later in the episode, he loses a toe during a riot.
Petty had a recurring role as
the voice of Elroy "Lucky"
Kleinschmidt in the animated comedy series King of the Hill from 2004 to 2009.
In 2010, Petty made a five-second cameo appearance with comedian Andy Samberg
in a musical video titled "Great Day" featured on the bonus DVD as
part of The Lonely Island's new album Turtleneck & Chain.
Views on artistic control
Petty was known as a staunch
guardian of his artistic control and artistic freedom. In 1979, he was involved
in a legal dispute when ABC Records was sold to MCA Records. He refused to be
transferred to another record label without his consent. In May 1979, he filed
for bankruptcy and was signed to the new MCA subsidiary Backstreet Records.
In early 1981, the upcoming Tom
Petty and the Heartbreakers album, which would become Hard Promises, was slated
to be the next MCA release with the new list price of $9.98, following Steely
Dan's Gaucho and the Olivia Newton-John/Electric Light Orchestra Xanadu
soundtrack. This so-called "superstar
pricing" was $1.00 more than the usual list price of $8.98. Petty
voiced his objections to the price hike in the press and the issue became a
popular cause among music fans. Non-delivery of the album and naming it Eight
Ninety-Eight were considered, but eventually MCA decided against the price
increase.
In 1987, Petty sued tire company
B.F. Goodrich for $1 million for using a song very similar to his song "Mary's New Car" in a TV
commercial. The ad agency that produced the commercial had previously sought
permission to use Petty's song but was refused. A judge issued a temporary
restraining order prohibiting further use of the ad and the suit was later
settled out of court. Petty also disallowed George W. Bush from using "I
Won't Back Down" for his 2000 presidential campaign. His family would do
the same for Donald Trump in 2020, stating "Tom
Petty would never want a song of his used for a campaign of hate."
Some outlets have claimed that
the Red Hot Chili Peppers single "Dani California", released in May
2006, bears a close musical similarity to Petty's "Mary Jane's Last Dance". Petty told Rolling Stone, "I seriously doubt that there is any
negative intent there. And a lot of rock 'n' roll songs sound alike. Ask Chuck
Berry. The Strokes took 'American Girl' for their song 'Last Nite', and I saw
an interview with them where they actually admitted it. Those made me laugh out
loud. I was like, 'OK, good for you' ... If someone took my song note for note
and stole it maliciously, then maybe [I'd sue]. But I don't believe in lawsuits
much. I think there are enough frivolous lawsuits in this country without
people fighting over pop songs."
In January 2015, it was revealed
that Petty and Jeff Lynne would receive royalties from Sam Smith's song "Stay with Me" after its
writers acknowledged similarities between it and "I Won't Back Down". Petty and co-composer Lynne were
each awarded 12.5% of the royalties from "Stay with Me", and their
names were added to the ASCAP song credit. Petty clarified that he did not
believe Smith plagiarized him, saying, "All
my years of songwriting have shown me these things can happen. Most times you
catch it before it gets out the studio door but in this case it got by. Sam's
people were very understanding of our predicament and we easily came to an
agreement".
Personal life
Petty married Jane Benyo in
1974, and they divorced in 1996. Petty and Benyo had two daughters: Adria, a
director, and Annakim, an artist. Benyo once told mutual friend Stevie Nicks
that she had met Petty at "the age
of seventeen". Nicks misheard Benyo's North Florida accent, inspiring
the title of her song "Edge of
Seventeen".
On May 17, 1987, an arsonist set
fire to Petty's house in Encino, California. Firefighters were able to salvage
the basement recording studio and the original tapes stored there, as well as
his Gibson Dove acoustic guitar. His signature gray top hat, however, was
destroyed. The perpetrator was never caught.
Petty struggled with heroin
addiction from roughly 1996 through 1999. He blamed the emotional pain from the
dissolution of his marriage to Benyo as a major contributing cause. He later
said that "using heroin went against
my grain. I didn't want to be enslaved to anything." He eventually
went to a treatment center, and was able to successfully treat his addiction
before the tour for Echo in mid-1999.
On June 3, 2001, Petty married
Dana York, who had a son, Dylan, from an earlier marriage.
In a 2006 interview, Petty said
he knew he wanted to be in a band the moment he saw the Beatles on The Ed
Sullivan Show. "The minute I saw the
Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show—and it's true of thousands of guys—there was
the way out. There was the way to do it. You get your friends and you're a
self-contained unit. And you make the music. And it looked like so much fun. It
was something I identified with. I had never been hugely into sports. ... I had
been a big fan of Elvis. But I really saw in the Beatles that here's something
I could do. I knew I could do it. It wasn't long before there were groups
springing up in garages all over the place." He dropped out of high
school at age 17 to play bass with his newly formed band.
In an interview with the CBC in
2014, Petty stated that the Rolling Stones were "my punk music". He credited the group with inspiring him
by demonstrating that he and musicians like him could make it in rock and roll.
Petty spoke in 2014 of the
benefits from his practice of Transcendental Meditation.
Death
Petty was found unconscious at
his home, not breathing and in cardiac arrest, in the early morning hours of
October 2, 2017. He was resuscitated and taken to the UCLA Medical Center in
Santa Monica, California, where he died at 8:40 p.m. PDT after premature
reports of his death throughout the day. Hours prior to Petty's death, the Las
Vegas shooting occurred, which became the deadliest mass shooting committed by
an individual in United States history. This led to initial confusion over
Petty's state; his death was incorrectly announced, and several celebrities
(including Courtney Love, Kid Rock, Cyndi Lauper and Lin-Manuel Miranda) made
statements expressing their sadness. The announcement of his death was soon
retracted, only to be then confirmed again—although this time correctly.
A memorial service for Petty was
held at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine in Pacific Palisades, Los
Angeles, on October 16, 2017, four days before what would have been his 67th
birthday.
On January 19, 2018, the Los
Angeles County Medical Examiner announced that Petty had died of "multisystem organ failure due to
resuscitated cardiopulmonary arrest due to mixed drug toxicity", which
was reported by Rolling Stone as an "accidental
overdose", a combination of fentanyl, oxycodone, acetylfentanyl and
despropionyl fentanyl (all opioids); temazepam and alprazolam (both sedatives);
and citalopram (an antidepressant). In a statement on his website, Petty's wife
and daughter said he had a number of medical problems, including emphysema,
knee difficulties "and most
significantly a fractured hip". He was prescribed pain medication for
these problems and informed on the day of his death that his hip injury had
worsened. The statement read, "[it]
is our feeling that the pain was simply unbearable and was the cause for his
overuse of medication.[..] We feel confident that this was, as the coroner
found, an unfortunate accident."
On September 28, 2018, Petty's
widow Dana gave an interview to Billboard saying that Petty put off hip surgery
his doctors had recommended for some time. "He'd
had it in mind it was his last tour and he owed it to his long-time crew, from
decades some of them, and his fans." Dana said that Petty was in a good
mood the day before his death: "He had those three shows in L.A. Never had
he been so proud of himself, so happy, so looking forward to the future—and
then he's gone."
Equipment
Petty owned and used a number of
guitars over the years. From 1976 to 1982, his main instrument was a sunburst
1964 Fender Stratocaster. He also used Rickenbacker guitars from 1979 onwards.
The Rickenbacker 660/12TP neck was designed by Petty and featured his signature
from 1991 to 1997. He also extensively played several Fender Telecasters. Guild
D25 12-string acoustic.
Petty's later amplifier setup
featured two Fender Vibro-King 60-watt combos.
Awards and honors
In 1994, You Got Lucky, a Petty
tribute album featuring such bands as Everclear and Silkworm was released.
In April 1996, Petty received
UCLA's George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin Award for Lifetime Musical Achievement.
The next month, Petty won the American Society of Composers, Authors and
Publishers' Golden Note Award.
Hollywood Walk of Fame star
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1999, for their contribution
to the recording industry.
In December 2001, Tom Petty and
the Heartbreakers were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, which
further honored Petty with an exhibit of his items from July 2006 until 2007.
He is ranked 91st on Rolling
Stone's list of the Greatest Artists of All Time.
Petty received the Billboard
Century Award, the organization's highest honor for creative achievement on
December 6, 2005.
In September 2006, Tom Petty and
the Heartbreakers received the keys to the city of Gainesville, Florida, where
he and his bandmates either lived or grew up.
Peter Bogdanovich's documentary
film on Petty's career titled Runnin' Down a Dream premiered at the New York
Film Festival in October 2007.
Petty was honored as MusiCares
Person of the Year in February 2017 for his contributions to music and for his
philanthropy.
A week after his death in 2017,
a tribute to Petty was painted on Gainesville's Southwest 34th Street Wall. It
reads "Love you always, Gainesville
No. 1 Son, Thanks, Tommy".
In October 2018, on what would
have been the singer's 68th birthday, the city of Gainesville renamed the
former Northeast Park, a park where a young Petty had often visited, as Tom
Petty Park.
In December 2021, the University
of Florida board of trustees unanimously voted to posthumously award Petty with
an honorary Ph.D. from the school.
He has three albums, Wildflowers
(No. 214), Damn the Torpedoes (No. 231), and Full Moon Fever (No. 298) on
Rolling Stone magazine's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list. He has two songs
on the same magazine's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list. "American Girl" (No. 169), and
"Free Fallin'" (No. 219).
In October 2022, the University
of Florida's Pride of the Sunshine dedicated their halftime show to Tom Petty's
music as part of the university's inaugural Tom Petty Day. The band would
continue to tribute their performances to Tom Petty during halftime in several
other games throughout the 2022-23 football season.
Discography
With the Heartbreakers
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
(1976)
You're Gonna Get It! (1978)
Damn the Torpedoes (1979)
Hard Promises (1981)
Long After Dark (1982)
Southern Accents (1985)
Let Me Up (I've Had Enough)
(1987)
Into the Great Wide Open (1991)
Songs and Music from "She's the One" (1996)
Echo (1999)
The Last DJ (2002)
Mojo (2010)
Hypnotic Eye (2014)
With the Traveling Wilburys
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 (1988)
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3 (1990)
Solo
Full Moon Fever (1989)
Wildflowers (1994)
Highway Companion (2006)
With Mudcrutch
Mudcrutch (2008)
2 (2016)
Posthumously
An American Treasure (2018)
The Best of Everything (2019)
Wildflowers & All the Rest
(2020)
Finding Wildflowers: Alternate
Versions (2021)
Angel Dream (Songs and Music
from the Motion Picture 'She's the One')
(2021)
Filmography
Film
1978 FM Himself
1987 Made in Heaven Stanky
1996 She's the One — Soundtrack
1997 The Postman Bridge
City Mayor
2007 Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: Runnin' Down a Dream Himself Music Documentary
2013 Sound City Himself Music Documentary
2018 Elvis Presley: The Searcher Himself Music Documentary
2019 Echo in the Canyon Himself Music Documentary
2021 Tom Petty: Somewhere You Feel Free Himself Music Documentary
Television
1979–2010 Saturday Night
Live Himself (musical guest) 8 episodes
— "Buck Henry/Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers" (1979)
— "Howard Hesseman/Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers"
(1983)
— "Steve Martin/Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers" (1989)
— "Kirstie Alley/Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers" (1992)
— "John Turturro/Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers" (1994)
— "Tom Hanks/Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers" (1996)
— "John Goodman/Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers" (1999)
— "Alec Baldwin/Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers" (2010)
1987–89 It's Garry
Shandling's Show Himself 4 episodes
— "It's Gary Shandling's Christmas Show" (1987)
— "No Baby, No Show" (1987)
— "Vegas: Part 1" (1989)
— "Vegas: Part 2" (1989)
1989 Biography Himself
(interviewee) Episode: "Johnny Cash: The Man in Black"
1994 Tom Petty: Going Home Himself TV documentary
1998 The Larry Sanders Show Himself Episode: "Flip"
1999 Behind the Music Himself Episode: "Tom
Petty & the Heartbreakers"
2002 The Simpsons Himself
(voice role) Episode: "How I Spent My Strummer Vacation"
2004–09 King of the Hill Lucky
(voice role) recurring role (28
episodes)
2008 Super Bowl XLII Himself Halftime show
Credited as Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers
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