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View Full Version : 'Good old hippie music' from Tom Petty, Mudcrutch in Santa Cruz


wild1forever
04-16-2008, 10:56 AM
http://www.mercurynews.com/music/ci_8934688?nclick_check=1


By Shay Quillen
Mercury News

In case anyone didn't know what to expect from Mudcrutch, lead singer Tom Petty set the capacity crowd straight after the first number Monday at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium. "You've come to the right place if you're looking for some good old hippie music tonight," the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer said, a bass guitar around his neck and a wide grin across his face.

And the quintet - including Mike Campbell on guitar and Benmont Tench on keyboards from Petty's current band, the Heartbreakers - delivered as promised, conjuring memories of the Flying Burrito Brothers, the latter-day Byrds and even the Grateful Dead on both new songs and familiar oldies from its Florida bar-band past. It was nothing earth-shaking, but the joy and friendship emanating from the stage was contagious.

This was only the second show for the band Petty reassembled last year - after 35 years apart - to record an album of all-new material, set for release later this month. He had formed it with singer-guitarist Tom Leadon in 1970. (The tour continues with sold-out shows tonight and Thursday at the Fillmore in San Francisco.) In fact, it was the second show ever for this lineup, as Tench didn't officially join until after Leadon left in '72. So it wasn't surprising things started out a bit shaky with a "Shady Grove" that found drummer Randall Marsh struggling to lock in with the rest of the band.

But before long, the easygoing country-rock began to jell on Petty's fine post-Katrina song "Orphan of the Storm" and the old truck-driving anthem "Six Days on the Road." By the time they launched into Dylan's "Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I'll Go Mine)," the band was firing on all cylinders, and a powerful version of the Byrds' "Lover of the Bayou" played to the band's strengths perfectly.

Much of the night, however, was devoted to brand-new Petty tunes. The first single, "I Don't Scare Easy," could easily have fit on a recent Heartbreakers album, but other songs allowed Petty to explore less-traveled terrain: "House of Stone" echoes Hank Williams;"Crystal River" gives his buddy Campbell a chance to flex his inner Jerry Garcia.

Leadon acquitted himself ably singing harmony to Petty, but his lightweight lead vocals sounded more suited for a coffeehouse than a barn-burning rock band. On guitar, however, his interplay with Campbell was often thrilling, especially on the new Campbell/Petty composition "Bootleg Flyer." Tenchwas his usual expert self on piano and organ.

The set closed with a raucous "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" that found many in the crowd taking the "everybody must get stoned" chorus to heart. For the encores, the hardwood floor of the Civic turned into a hippie sock hop as Mudcrutch rocked through hot versions of Eddie Cochran's "Summertime Blues" and Jerry Lee Lewis' "High School Confidential."

By then, Petty wasn't the only one with a huge grin.

Flower
04-16-2008, 11:20 AM
He turned 35 last Sunday
In his hair he found some gray
But he still ain't changed his lifestyle
He likes it better the old way

So he grows a little garden
In the backyard by the fence
He's consuming what he's growing
nowadays in self defense
He gets out there in the twilight zone sometimes
when it just don't make no sense

He gets off on country music
Cause disco left him cold
And he's got young friends and a new way
But he's just to frickin old

And he dreams at night of Woodstock
and the day John Lennon died
how the music made him happy
and the silence made him cry
yeah he thinks of John sometimes
and he has to wonder why

(chorus)
Cause he's an old hippie
and he don't know what to do
Should he hang on to the old
Should he grab on to the new
He's and old hippie
this new life is just a bust
he ain't trying to change nobody
he's just trying real hard to adjust

He was sure back in the sixties
that everyone was hip
then they sent him off to vietnam
on his senior trip

and they forced him to become a man
while he was still a boy
and behind each wave of tragedy
he waited for the joy
now this world may change around him
but he just can't change no more

(chorus)

Well he stays away a lot now
from the parties and the clubs
and he's thinking while he's jogging round
sure is glad he quit the hard drugs

Cause him and his kind get more endangered everyday
and pretty soon the species will just up and fade away
like the smoke from that torpedo, just up and fade away

(chorus)

yeah he ain't trying to change nobody
he's just trying real hard to adjust

This song came to mind reading this.

agirl
04-16-2008, 01:40 PM
Thanks toni. I really can't wait until this weekend.

WildflowerNJ
04-16-2008, 02:40 PM
Thanks, Toni..and Flower for those lyrics...haha, good old hippie music...sounds great to these ears!! Looking forward to my Troubadour shows.....this little hippie-girl is going to be in heaven!! :b55:

Magnolia
04-16-2008, 08:55 PM
Wow, love the review. It sounds like this reviewer really "got it"!
Flower, great lyrics!

Wingspan91089
04-16-2008, 09:38 PM
Thanks for posting the article Toni! :)
Great lyrics Flower! :D

Dynabeat Tim
04-17-2008, 07:52 AM
Yea, I remember when I thought 35 was old ! I can also remember when a 30 yr old woman was an old lady LOL. My how time can change your perspective of things. Now a days I know a lot of Hot 50 year old girls !!
thanks for the post. I also read a review at a beatle site, from someone who attended the gig and they said it was fantastic and that the guys were having lots of fun. And Tom played a hofner club bass all night. It also listed the other guys gtr's but they escape me now.

Pettyjunkie
04-17-2008, 11:48 AM
Love the lyrics and the article. :) Thanks Toni and Flower.