PC Software: Windows 7 Ultimate Build 7600
File Type: FLAC Compression 6
Cd Hardware: Plextor PX-716SA
Plextor Firmware: 1.11 (Final)
Cd Software: Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5
EAC Log: Yes (for my rip)
EAC Cue Sheet: Yes (for my rip)
Tracker(s): http://fr33dom.h33t.com:3310/announce; http://tracker.openbittorrent.com/announce; http://inferno.demonoid.com:3391/announce
Torrent Hash: CAFA8F2EBB6051CF1BF44AA67CCDCAF1D8175EC5
File Size: 8.86 GB
Label: MCA, Warner Bros, American
Albums, Years & Catalog # in this torrent:
Official Live Leg 1977 (US version)
Pack Up The Plantation...Live! 1985
Lonesome Town (with Bob Dylan) 1986
Traveling Wilbury's Vol. 1 1988 (from the 2007 release Collection)
Free Fallin' (Single, UK 1989)*
Traveling Wilbury's Vol. 3 1990 (from the 2007 release Collection)
Playback 1995
Anthology - Through The Years 2000
Soundstage 2005 (24 Bit / 48 KHz)
Mudcrutch 2008
The Live Anthology 2009
Mojo 2010 (24Bit / 48 KHz)
*Denotes my rip.
I would like to thank fellow Demonoid members DEHangar for his awesome Mojo & Soundstage Blue Ray torrents, OwenGWilliam for Offical Live Leg, truenorthstrongnfree for Live Anthology, Portland Bill for Lonesome Town, Dernsjo for Playback, Yodahh for Through The Years Anthology and kikokakuke for Mudcrutch. Thanks to you all :)
The only rip of mine for this torrent is the Free Fallin UK single that just arrived in the mail. I had been looking for this particular live Free Fallin version for 20+ years and it could only be found on this single. Give this song a listen to :)
Please help seed these FLACs!
From Wiki:
Quote:
Thomas Earl "Tom" Petty (born October 20, 1950) is an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. He is the frontman of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and was a founding member of the late 1980s supergroup Traveling Wilburys and Mudcrutch. He has also performed under the pseudonyms of Charlie T. Wilbury, Jr. and Muddy Wilbury.
He has recorded a number of hit singles with the Heartbreakers and as a solo artist, many of which remain heavily played on adult contemporary and classic rock radio. His music, notably his hits, have become popular among younger generations as he continues to host sold-out shows.[1] Throughout his career, Petty and his collaborators have sold 60 million albums.[2]
Petty and his band the Heartbreakers celebrated their 30th anniversary with a tour in 2006, though Petty has occasionally released solo work, such as 2006's Highway Companion[3], on which he performed most of the backing instrumentation. Members of the Heartbreakers have played on each of his solo albums and the band has always backed him when touring in support of those albums. He has also toured with Mudcrutch in order to promote their debut album.
Petty has been managed by Tony Dimitriades since 1976. [4] On February 3, 2008, Petty and the Heartbreakers performed at the Super Bowl XLII Halftime show.
Official Live Leg 1977
Official Live 'Leg a.k.a. The Official Live Bootleg is a one-sided live promotional LP by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers issued by Shelter Records in 1977. It was recorded at one of the bands' earliest gigs, opening for Al Kooper at Paul's Mall in Boston on December 12, 1976.
Tracks:
1. "Jaguar and Thunderbird" (Chuck Berry) – 2:28
2. "Fooled Again (I Don't Like It)" (Tom Petty) – 5:17
3. "Luna" (Petty) – 4:17
4. "Dog on the Run" (Petty) – 9:22
Pack Up The Plantation...Live! 1985
Pack Up the Plantation: Live! is the first live album by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, released in 1985. It was primarily recorded at the Wiltern Theatre during their 1985 tour but also includes several tracks from previous tours. It was released as a double LP or single cassette and compact disc.
A concert film of the Wiltern Theatre performance, also titled Pack Up the Plantation: Live! was released on home video in 1986. It included songs that did not make the album, such as originals "Don't Do Me Like That" and "Don't Come Around Here No More", as well as covers such as "Little Bit O' Soul" and "Route 66".
Tracks:
1. "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" (Chris Hillman, Roger McGuinn) – 3:30
2. "Needles and Pins" (Sonny Bono, Jack Nitzsche) – 2:23
3. "The Waiting" – 5:08
4. "Breakdown" – 7:43
5. "American Girl" – 3:50
6. "It Ain't Nothin' to Me" (Petty, David A. Stewart) – 6:05
7. "Insider" – 5:16
8. "Rockin' Around (With You)" (Petty, Mike Campbell) – 3:20
9. "Refugee" (Petty, Campbell) – 5:22
10. "I Need To Know" (LP and cassette only)
11. "Southern Accents" – 5:20
12. "Rebels" – 6:10
13. "Don't Bring Me Down" (Gerry Goffin, Carole King) – 3:40
14. "You Got Lucky" (LP and cassette only)
15. "Shout" (O'Kelly Isley, Ronald Isley, Rudolph Isley) – 9:30
16. "Stories We Could Tell" (John Sebastian) – 3:55
Lonesome Town 1986
Tracks:
Positively Fourth Street
All Along The Watchtower
Masters of War
I'll Remember You
I Forgot More Than You'll Ever Know
Bye Bye Johnny
Breakdown
Just Like a Woman
Blowin In The Wind
That Lucky Old Sun
So You Want to Be a RnR Star
Spike
Like a Rolling Stone
Knockin' On Heavens Door
The Traveling Wilbury's Vol 1 1988
The Traveling Wilburys (sometimes shortened to the Wilburys) were an Anglo-American supergroup consisting of George Harrison, Jeff Lynne, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and Bob Dylan, accompanied by drummer Jim Keltner.[1] The band recorded two albums between 1988–1990, although Roy Orbison died before the second album was recorded.
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 is the debut album by the supergroup Traveling Wilburys and was recorded and released in 1988 to commercial success and critical acclaim.
In early April 1988, George Harrison was in Los Angeles, California and needed to record a B-side for a European 12-inch single. Jeff Lynne was also in Los Angeles producing some tracks for Roy Orbison as well as Tom Petty’s solo album. While having dinner with Lynne and Orbison, Harrison related how he needed to record a new track and wanted to do it the next day. Both offered to help. Needing a studio on short notice, Harrison suggested they call Bob Dylan, who had a home studio. After dinner, George stopped by Tom Petty’s house to pick up his guitar for the next day’s session and invited him along too. Gathering at Dylan’s Malibu home the following day, they wrote and recorded the song “Handle with Care” in five hours, with all five sharing the vocals.[1]
The track was considered too good to be used as a B-side, so Harrison hatched the idea to form a band and record another nine songs for an album. The group got together again for nine days in May, recording the basic tracks and vocals at Dave Stewart’s home studio in Los Angeles. Overdubs and mixing were done back in England at Harrison’s home studio F.P.S.H.O.T. (Friar Park Studio, Henley-on-Thames).
Masquerading as the Wilbury brothers, the participants would be known as Nelson (Harrison), Otis (Lynne), Lucky (Dylan), Lefty (Orbison) and Charlie T. Jr. (Petty). Harrison was no stranger to the use of alternate identities with Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, but this concept was taken a step further: their real names never appear anywhere on the album, liner notes, or even the songwriting credits.
With Harrison having the greatest claim to the band, he signed them up to Warner Bros. Records (which Petty eventually signed to himself), his current label, and incorporated their own Wilbury Records label, in addition to producing the sessions with Lynne that spring.
Released October 18, 1988, Volume One became the surprise hit of the year, selling two million copies within six months. Although the single "Handle With Care" did not scale the pop charts (it stalled at US #45), the album did, reaching #16 in the UK and an impressive #3 in the US. With over fifty weeks on the charts, the album was later certified triple-platinum. While Harrison and Petty had had recent successes, Dylan, Orbison and Lynne had not seen an album climb that high in several years. At the time, no Dylan album had ever achieved two million in sales. As one critic put it, it was "one of the great commercial coups of the decade."
Most critics said the group's modest ambitions were fresh and relaxing. During 1989 and 1990 the album won many accolades, including a Grammy for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group.
Orbison died suddenly of a heart attack on 6 December 1988.
After George Harrison’s distribution deal with Warner Bros. expired in 1995, ownership of the Dark Horse Records catalog as well as the two Traveling Wilburys albums reverted to Harrison and the albums went out of print.[2] On June 12, 2007, Volume One and Vol. 3 were re-issued by Rhino Records as The Traveling Wilburys Collection, packaged together with bonus tracks and a DVD. The box set debuted at #1 on the UK Albums Chart and at #9 on The Billboard 200.
Tracks:
1. "Handle with Care" – 3:20
2. "Dirty World" – 3:30
3. "Rattled" – 3:00
4. "Last Night" – 3:48
5. "Not Alone Any More" – 3:24
6. "Congratulations" – 3:30
7. "Heading for the Light" – 3:37
8. "Margarita" – 3:15
9. "Tweeter and the Monkey Man" – 5:30
10. "End of the Line" – 3:30
11. "Maxine" – 2:49
12. "Like a Ship" – 3:31
The Traveling Wilbury's Vol 3 1990
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3 is the 1990 follow-up album by the supergroup Traveling Wilburys to their 1988 debut Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1.
Though it was their second release, the album was mischievously titled Vol. 3 by George Harrison. According to Jeff Lynne, "That was George's idea. He said, 'Let's confuse the buggers.' " [1]
As the dynamics within the band had shifted with Orbison's passing, the four remaining members all adopted new Wilbury pseudonyms: Spike (George Harrison), Clayton (Jeff Lynne), Muddy (Tom Petty) and Boo (Bob Dylan). With Harrison and Lynne producing again, the sessions were undertaken in the spring of 1990, with an additional track, a cover of "Nobody's Child" being set aside for a charity compilation album.
Released in October, Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3 was predictably less rapturously-received than its predecessor, yet still saw a fair measure of success, with both "She's My Baby" (#2 album rock) and "Inside Out" (#16 album rock) becoming radio hits as the album reached #14 in the UK and #11 in the US where it went platinum.
Although there has since been speculation about further Wilbury releases, Harrison's 2001 death is considered to have ended any possible future projects with Harrison having been the unofficial leader of the group and with his estate owning the rights to both albums.
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3 was dedicated in memory of Lefty Wilbury (Roy Orbison).
After George Harrison’s distribution deal with Warner Bros. expired in 1995, ownership of the Dark Horse Records catalog as well as the two Traveling Wilburys albums reverted to Harrison and the albums went out of print.[2] On June 12, 2007, Volume One and Vol. 3 were re-issued by Rhino Records as The Traveling Wilburys Collection, packaged together with bonus tracks and a DVD. The box set debuted at #1 on the UK Albums Chart and at #9 on The Billboard 200.
Tracks:
1. "She's My Baby" – 3:15
2. "Inside Out" – 3:35
3. "If You Belonged to Me" – 3:13
4. "The Devil's Been Busy" – 3:18
5. "7 Deadly Sins" – 3:17
6. "Poor House" – 3:16
7. "Where Were You Last Night?" – 3:03
8. "Cool Dry Place" – 3:37
9. "New Blue Moon" – 3:20
10. "You Took My Breath Away" – 3:18
11. "Wilbury Twist" – 2:58
12. "Nobody's Child" (Cy Coben, Mel Foree) – 3:28
13. "Runaway" (Max Crook, Del Shannon) – 2:30
Playback 1995
Playback is a box set compilation by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, released in 1995. It contains popular album tracks, B-sides, previously unreleased outtakes, and early songs by Petty's previous band Mudcrutch.
A companion VHS home video, later released on DVD, was also released, featuring the band's most popular music videos to date.
Tracks:
Disc one: The Big Jangle
1. "Breakdown"
2. "American Girl"
3. "Hometown Blues"
4. "Anything That's Rock 'n' Roll"
5. "I Need to Know"
6. "Listen to Her Heart"
7. "When the Time Comes"
8. "Too Much Ain't Enough"
9. "No Second Thoughts"
10. "Baby's a Rock 'n' Roller"
11. "Refugee"
12. "Here Comes My Girl"
13. "Even the Losers"
14. "Shadow of a Doubt (A Complex Kid)"
15. "Don't Do Me Like That"
16. "The Waiting"
17. "A Woman in Love (It's Not Me)"
18. "Something Big"
19. "A Thing About You"
20. "Insider"
21. "You Can Still Change Your Mind"
Disc two: Spoiled and Mistreated
1. "You Got Lucky"
2. "Change of Heart"
3. "Straight into Darkness"
4. "Same Old You"
5. "Rebels"
6. "Don't Come Around Here No More"
7. "Southern Accents"
8. "Make It Better (Forget About Me)"
9. "The Best of Everything"
10. "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star"
11. "Don't Bring Me Down"
12. "Jammin' Me"
13. "It'll All Work Out"
14. "My Life/Your World"
15. "Think About Me"
16. "A Self-Made Man"
Disc three: Good Booty
1. "Free Fallin'"
2. "I Won't Back Down"
3. "Love is a Long Road"
4. "Runnin' Down a Dream"
5. "Yer So Bad"
6. "Alright for Now"
7. "Learning to Fly"
8. "Into the Great Wide Open"
9. "All or Nothin'"
10. "Out in the Cold"
11. "Built to Last"
12. "Mary Jane's Last Dance"
13. "Christmas All Over Again"
Disc four: The Other Sides
1. "Casa Dega" (Petty, Campbell) – 3:37
2. "Heartbreakers Beach Party" (Petty) – 1:57
3. "Trailer" (Petty) – 3:15
4. "Cracking Up" (Nick Lowe) – 3:34
5. "Psychotic Reaction" (Live) (Ken Ellner, Roy Chaney, Craig Atkinson, John Byrne, John Michalski) – 4:49
6. "I'm Tired Joey Boy" (Live) (Van Morrison) – 3:42
7. "Lonely Weekends" (Live) (Charlie Rich) – 2:47
8. "Gator on the Lawn" (Petty) – 1:35
9. "Make That Connection" (Petty, Campbell) – 5:04
10. "Down the Line" (Petty, Lynne, Campbell) – 2:53
11. "Peace in L.A." (Peace Mix) (Petty) – 4:43
12. "It's Rainin' Again" (Petty) – 1:32
13. "Somethin' Else" (Live) (Sharon Sheeley, Bob Cochran) – 2:05
14. "I Don't Know What to Say to You" (Petty) – 2:28
15. "Kings Highway" (Live) (Petty) – 3:30
Disc five: Through the Cracks
1. "On the Street" (Benmont Tench) – 2:10
2. "Depot Street" (Petty) – 3:26
3. "Cry to Me" (Bert Russell) – 3:06
4. "Don't Do Me Like That" (Mudcrutch Version) (Petty) – 2:47
5. "I Can't Fight It" (Petty) – 3:00
6. "Since You Said You Loved Me" (Petty) – 4:40
7. "Louisiana Rain" (Original Version) (Petty) – 4:22
8. "Keeping Me Alive" (Petty) – 2:59
9. "Turning Point" (Petty) – 2:52
10. "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (Demo Version) (Petty, Campbell) – 4:11
11. "The Apartment Song" (Demo Version) (Petty) – 2:37
12. "Big Boss Man" (Al Smith, Luther Dixon) – 2:41
13. "The Image of Me" (Wayne Kemp) – 2:33
14. "Moon Pie" (Petty) – 1:05
15. "The Damage You've Done" (Country Version) (Petty) – 3:16
Disc six: Nobody's Children
1. "Got My Mind Made Up" (Original Version) (Petty) – 2:51
2. "Ways to Be Wicked" (Petty, Campbell) – 3:27
3. "Can't Get Her Out" (Petty) – 3:11
4. "Waiting for Tonight" (Petty) – 3:30
5. "Travelin'" (Petty) – 3:15
6. "Baby, Let's Play House" (Arthur Gunter) – 2:33
7. "Wooden Heart" (Bert Kaempfert, Kay Twomey, Fred Wise, Ben Weisman) – 2:09
8. "God's Gift to Man" (Petty) – 4:18
9. "You Get Me High" (Petty) – 2:48
10. "Come on Down to My House" (Petty) – 3:05
11. "You Come Through" (Petty, Campbell) – 5:15
12. "Up in Mississippi Tonight" (Petty) – 3:28
Anthology - Through The Years 2000
Anthology: Through the Years is a double compilation album featuring the best of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. It contains a new song, "Surrender", written by Petty during the You're Gonna Get It! sessions, but recorded in 2000 especially for this release. "Surrender" is also the last studio recording of Howie Epstein before his death.
Anthology: Through the Years was released on October 31, 2000, and would mark the worst chart-positioning on the Billboard 200 for the band at #87. However, in November 2006, the album was certified Gold (equilvalent to 500,000 copies sold) by the RIAA.
Tracks:
Disc one
1. "Breakdown" – 2:42
2. "American Girl" – 3:30
3. "Hometown Blues" – 2:11
4. "The Wild One, Forever" – 3:00
5. "I Need to Know" – 2:23
6. "Listen to Her Heart" – 3:01
7. "Too Much Ain't Enough" – 2:56
8. "Refugee" (Petty, Mike Campbell) – 3:21
9. "Here Comes My Girl" (Petty, Campbell) – 4:33
10. "Don't Do Me Like That" – 2:40
11. "Even the Losers" – 3:35
12. "The Waiting" – 3:54
13. "A Woman in Love (It's Not Me)" (Petty, Campbell) – 4:22
14. "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" (with Stevie Nicks) (Petty, Campbell) – 4:02
15. "You Got Lucky" (Petty, Campbell) – 3:37
16. "Straight into Darkness" – 3:49
17. "Change of Heart" – 3:18
Disc two
1. "Rebels" – 5:20
2. "Don't Come Around Here No More" (Petty, David A. Stewart) – 5:06
3. "The Best of Everything" – 3:59
4. "So You Want to Be a Rock 'n' Roll Star" (Roger McGuinn, Chris Hillman) – 3:30
5. "Jammin' Me" (Petty, Campbell, Bob Dylan) – 4:08
6. "It'll All Work Out" – 3:12
7. "Love Is a Long Road" (Petty, Campbell) – 4:06
8. "Free Fallin'" (Petty, Jeff Lynne) – 4:14
9. "Yer So Bad" (Petty, Lynne) – 3:05
10. "I Won't Back Down" (Petty, Lynne) – 2:56
11. "Runnin' Down a Dream" (Petty, Campbell, Lynne) – 4:23
12. "Learning to Fly" (Petty, Lynne) – 3:57
13. "Into the Great Wide Open" (Petty, Lynne) – 3:38
14. "Two Gunslingers" – 3:10
15. "Mary Jane's Last Dance" – 4:32
16. "Waiting for Tonight" – 3:31
17. "Surrender" – 2:54
Soundstage 2005
Tracks:
Disc 1
Baby Please Don't Go
Crawlin Back To You
Handle With Care
I Won't Back Down
I'm Cryin'
Angel Dream
Melinda
Born In Chicago
Red Rooster
Carol
Refugee
Disc 2
Love Is A Long Road
You Don't Know How It Feels
Black Leather Woman
I Done Somebody Wrong
I Got A Woman
Thirteen Days
Wake Up Time
Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Lost Children
Two Men Talking
You Wreck Me
Bonus
Down Home Girl
I'd Like to Love You Baby
Not Fade Away
Walls
Yer So BAd
Billy The Kid
From the Last DJ - Live at the Olympics
Like a Diamond
Can't stop The Sun
Mudcrutch 2008
Mudcrutch is a Southern rock band from Gainesville, Florida best known for being the forerunner of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.
Mudcrutch was formed in 1970 by Tom Petty and Tom Leadon, who had been playing together in a band called the Epics. Mudcrutch's lineup consisted of Tom Petty (bass and vocals), Tom Leadon (guitar and vocals), Randall Marsh (drums) and Mike Campbell (guitar). Leadon left the band in 1972 and was replaced by bassist/guitarist/vocalist Danny Roberts. Keyboardist Benmont Tench also joined the band. Mudcrutch served as the house band at Dub's Lounge in its hometown of Gainesville, Florida.
In 1974, Mudcrutch signed with Shelter Records and re-located to Los Angeles, California. The band released one single, "Depot Street," in 1975, which failed to chart. After Danny Roberts left the group, Tom invited Charlie Souza to take over on bass guitar and the band continued recording in Leon Russell's Tulsa Studio, and later at Leon's Encino California home. The band's record company broke them up in late 1975. Petty, Campbell and Tench went on to form The Heartbreakers in 1976 with fellow Gainesville natives Stan Lynch and Ron Blair.[1]
2008 return
In August 2007, Tom Petty invited Randall Marsh and Tom Leadon, original members of Mudcrutch, to reunite with Heartbreakers Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell to reform Mudcrutch. They recorded an album, Mudcrutch, which was released on April 29, 2008, by Reprise Records, and contains 14 old and new tracks. "We would play and then we would just talk about the old days," said Tom Leadon. The band toured briefly in California to promote the album throughout April and the beginning of May 2008.
Fans who bought tickets to the tour through Ticketmaster were given six free downloads from their debut album.
On November 11, 2008 a live EP titled Extended Play Live was released. All the tracks were recorded live in April 2008. On the same day American music channel VH1 Classic broadcast a documentary about the band.
Tracks:
1. "Shady Grove"
2. "Scare Easy"
3. "Orphan of the Storm"
4. "Six Days on the Road"
5. "Crystal River"
6. "Oh Maria"
7. "This Is a Good Street"
8. "The Wrong Thing to Do"
9. "Queen of the Go-Go Girls"
10. "June Apple"
11. "Lover of the Bayou"
12. "Topanga Cowgirl"
13. "Bootleg Flyer"
14. "House of Stone"
The Live Anthology 2008
The Live Anthology is a live box set by American rock band Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. The box set was released by Reprise Records on November 23, 2009, in a number of formats, with the standard CD and download formats, composed of 48 tracks (on 4 discs).[1][2]
The album's cover artwork and packaging was designed by Shepard Fairey.
In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, Petty stated he compiled live material with Mike Campbell and Ryan Ulyate from three decades of live concerts.
In 2008, Ulyate began going through Petty's live archive and created an iTunes library of 170 concerts with a total of 3,509 performances of 400 unique songs. "I made sure Tom and Mike heard every song they ever did," Ulyate said, "And I ranked the concerts with a star system."
Throughout his career, Tom Petty extensively documented his concerts, beginning in the late seventies. "I'm glad we did it. I think this is one of the great live rock & roll bands. And you really understand us once you've heard this set. It was a lot of fun to put together"
Tracks:
CD 1
1. "Ladies and Gentlemen..." (June 30, 1981)
2. "Nightwatchman" (June 28, 1981)
3. "Even the Losers" (March 6, 1980)
4. "Here Comes My Girl" (March 6, 1980)
5. "A Thing About You" (June 28, 1981)
6. "I'm in Love" (December 7, 1982)
7. "I'm a Man" (September 21, 2006)
8. "Straight into Darkness" (December 7, 1982)
9. "Breakdown" (June 30, 1981)
10. "Something in the Air" (November 4, 1993)
11. "I Just Want to Make Love to You" (March 17, 1995)
12. "Drivin' Down to Georgia" (November 4, 1993)
13. "Lost Without You" (November 4, 1993)
14. "Refugee" (June 11, 1983)
CD 2
1. "Diddy Wah Diddy" (February 1, 1997)
2. "I Want You Back Again" (February 7, 1997)
3. "Wildflowers" (March 17, 1995)
4. "Friend of the Devil" (February 3, 1997)
5. "A Woman in Love (It's Not Me)" (June 29, 1981)
6. "It's Good to Be King" (September 21, 2006)
7. "Angel Dream (No. 2)" (April 19, 2003)
8. "Learning to Fly" (June 16, 2006)
9. "Mary Jane's Last Dance" (September 21, 2006)
10. "Mystic Eyes" (October 27, 2006)
CD 3
1. "Jammin' Me" (February 7, 1997)
2. "The Wild One, Forever" (March 6, 1980)
3. "Green Onions" (February 6, 1997)
4. "Louisiana Rain" (December 7, 1982)
5. "Melinda" (August 26, 2003)
6. "Goldfinger" (January 31, 1997)
7. "Surrender" (June 11, 1983)
8. "Dreamville" (October 16, 2002)
9. "Spike" (July 29, 1986)
10. "Any Way You Want It" (June 11, 1983)
11. "American Girl" (April 13, 1983)
CD 4
1. "Runnin' Down a Dream" (September 21, 2006)
2. "Oh Well" (June 16, 2006)
3. "Southern Accents" (September 21, 2006)
4. "Crawling Back to You" (August 26, 2005)
5. "My Life / Your World" (June 23, 1987)
6. "I Won't Back Down" (November 15, 2007)
7. "Square One" (June 17, 2006)
8. "Have Love Will Travel" (July 5, 2002)
9. "Free Fallin'" (August 14, 2005)
10. "The Waiting" (June 28, 1981)
11. "Good, Good Lovin'" (June 30, 1981)
12. "Century City" (July 8, 1980)
13. "Alright for Now" (March 17, 1995)
Mojo 2010
Mojo is the twelfth studio album by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, released on June 15, 2010 on CD and June 29 on BD.[1][2] It is their first album with the Heartbreakers in eight years.[3] Mojo debuted at number two on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling 125,000 copies in its first week of release.[4] The first single "I Should Have Known It" is currently sitting at number 42 on Billboards Rock Songs Chart.[citation needed] The album is also the band's first album since 1981's Hard Promises to feature returning original bassist Ron Blair in its entirety, as he only played on one track on the previous Heartbreakers album, The Last DJ.
In November 2009, Petty told Rolling Stone's David Fricke that it was his intention to record the album live in the studio without overdubs.[5]
He said of the album's tone, "It's blues-based. Some of the tunes are longer, more jammy kind of music. A couple of tracks really sound like the Allman Brothers — not the songs but the atmosphere of the band."
The band began streaming a song from the album, "Good Enough", on their website on February 24, 2010. "First Flash of Freedom" is now streaming on the website.[6] Videos for "Jefferson Jericho Blues," "First Flash of Freedom," "I Should Have Known It," "Something Good Coming," and "Good Enough" have been posted on the band's YouTube channel.[7]
Tom Petty has also released five of the songs prior to his upcoming Mojo tour via his YouTube account,[8] the first of which was the single "Good Enough", released on March 4, 2010.[9] The songs released as of June 10, 2010 are, in order of release:
1. "Good Enough"[9]
2. "First Flash of Freedom"[10]
3. "I Should Have Known It" [Official Video][11]
4. "Something Good Coming" [Official Video][12]
5. "Jefferson Jericho Blues" [Official Video][13]
The last three of the songs were clean, non-overdubbed songs filmed in his new studio, as he expressed in a roughly twelve-minute "Mojo Documentary".[14] He notes that he has had the studio for "eight or nine years", which dates back approximately to before the recordings of his last studio album with the Heartbreakers, The Last DJ.[14]
In addition to his YouTube account, Mojo's tracklist was made available via an article on one of ESPN's websites, on June 8, 2010. The article goes into very brief detail of the tour and of the songs. Most of the songs were made available on the website through a "Streampad" music player, at least until the album was officially released.
Tracks:
1. "Jefferson Jericho Blues"
2. "First Flash of Freedom" (Tom Petty, Mike Campbell)
3. "Running Man's Bible"
4. "The Trip to Pirate's Cove"
5. "Candy"
6. "No Reason to Cry"
7. "I Should Have Known It" (Tom Petty, Mike Campbell)
8. "U.S. 41"
9. "Takin' My Time"
10. "Let Yourself Go"
11. "Don't Pull Me Over"
12. "Lover's Touch"
13. "High In the Morning"
14. "Something Good Coming"
15. "Good Enough" (Tom Petty, Mike Campbell
Enjoy some Live Petty :)