
Good Morning!
Today we’re listening to “Century City” by Tom Petty
In 2017, 90000+ Florida Gators fans sang Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down." It was a moving tribute to their hometown hero who had passed away days earlier and never left in many ways.
In 1979, Tom Petty found himself a million miles away from Gainesville, Florida, in Los Angeles Superior Court right in the heart of a legal battle with his record label. In the middle of recording his 3rd album for Shelter Records, the label's parent company was sold to MCA. When Petty tried to opt out of his contract, he found himself in court. Petty threatened to scrub his forthcoming record, and MCA petitioned to seize the tapes from the band's sessions.
Petty had an engineer hide the recordings after each session as a preemptive strike. Refusing to back down (heh), Petty went so far as to file bankruptcy, forcing MCA to open his contracts to renegotiation.
In the end, he stayed on the label but under terms far more beneficial than he'd had previously. Under the same deal, they also established a label for him; Backstreet Records.
Four months after appearing in court, Damn The Torpedoes appeared on record store shelves.
Petty's always been great at dropping singles- most fans can name quite a few tracks, but not always which record they appear on. Damn The Torpedoes is full of them, of course. This is the record that gave us "Refugee," "Here Comes My Girl," "Even The Losers," & "Don't Do Me Like That."
Four out of nine songs making the charts is remarkable. But the record is all killer from start to finish. Four of the nine songs charted. "Century City" isn't one of them, but it could've (should've?) been.
The track is a blistering bit of kicks rock; it's Tom raising his middle finger to a city he loathes but clearly can't quit.
Sometimes I want to leave you
Sometimes I want to go
Right back where I came from
Back where I belong
But it never lasts for too long
Always goes away
Well, I still don't look for reasons
That's much too hard these days
Jimmy Iovine was on the boards and did well to channel that energy into a stadium-ready sound. If Iovine teed the band up for stardom, the writing & music on the album knocked it out of the park. For a guy that often sang about losers, this was—and remains—a huge W.
1981's follow-up, Hard Promises, would find Petty much more relaxed with a sound that reflected it. But in 1979, Petty was still a kid from Florida with a chip on his shoulder and something to prove.
Released on this day in 1979, Damn The Torpedoes proved he was here to stay.
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They’re eager enough to dress for success and hungry enough to show their teeth. In the past, they’ve flirted with black leather and bombast, intimations of tough-guy, flower-power pop and an occasional nervous New Wave beat. And carried off a lot of it. But what makes Damn the Torpedoes their best album yet isn’t so much its sound (though that’s clearer and punchier than before, thank heaven and coproducer Jimmy Iovine) but its assurance. Mechanical rhythms are hip, but something more fluid makes better time with the flowing organ and guitar surges Petty uses so well, and Damn the Torpedoes glides like a supertanker.
Read what else Rolling Stone had to say about the record here.
Listen:
“Century City” by Tom Petty| Damn The Torpedoes, 1979
Click the record to listen on your platform of choice.
As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts on this track!
Thanks for being here,
Kevin—
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It's on the expanded edition of Damn the Torpedoes but I love his version of Phil Seymour's "Surrender." Also Tom's playing guitar on Dwight Twilley Band's "Looking for the Magic." Such a fascinating career.
Tom Petty is a hero of mine. I loved just about everything he did and I followed him for nearly all of his 40+ year career. The Southern Accents Tour was my first concert (I wrote about it here if you're interested: https://goodmenproject.com/arts/shes-woman-love-not-cmtt/) and I probably saw him another dozen times since then. You always associate his voice and tone with Roger McGuinn, but on "Century City" I really feel like he's channeling Dylan. So great that they got to work together in the Wilburys. Great pick today. But, then again, any Tom Petty song would be a great pick.